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NEW TECHNIQUE CAN SHARPEN LASIK RESULTS
'Wavefront-guided'
method allows doctors to fix subtle corneal distortions, but it isn't risk-free.
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
The Associated Press
Just how much better this new "wavefront-guided LASIK" works isn't proved yet, but it's
causing excitement among eye surgeons who say the three-dimensional maps let
them customize treatment in a way never before possible.
Still, it comes with an important consumer
warning: This new surgery isn't risk-free, making it crucial to undergo exams
to determine if you're a good candidate.
That includes a key measurement to be sure
your cornea's thick enough to withstand zapping – wavefront-guided
LASIK can remove about 10 percent more tissue than regular LASIK does.
"This is a significant development that
will allow us to have better outcomes than we have had in the past," says
Dr. Doyle Stulting of
But consumers must understand "there is
never a 100 percent guarantee they'll get the perfect result," cautions
Dr. Douglas Koch of Baylor College of Medicine, who helped test a wavefront system developed by Visx
Inc.
Americans undergo more than a million LASIK
procedures a year, mostly to correct nearsightedness. Doctors use a laser to
zap away tissue from the cornea, reshaping it for sharper sight.
The vast majority of patients get better vision.
But a small proportion – nobody knows just how many – suffer side effects, such
as glare and other night-vision trouble, and painfully dry eyes. Some people
can't see as well even with glasses or contact lenses after LASIK as they could
before.
The new wavefront-guided
LASIK can't help the dry-eye problem, but the hope is that it will lessen other
side effects – and perhaps help salvage vision in patients harmed by earlier
conventional LASIK.
Regular LASIK is based on the person's glasses
prescription.
Wavefront-guided LASIK adds a measurement of more subtle corneal
distortions, called higher-order aberrations. Based on technology that helps
astronomers see twinkling stars more clearly, they send waves of light into
the eye and measure how they bounce back, forming a 3-D map of each person's
unique wave patterns.
Higher-order aberrations can blur fine detail
enough that someone whose quantity of vision measures a perfect 20/20 on an
eye chart still has trouble driving, especially at night. LASIK itself can cause
or worsen those distortions, essentially leaving a little ridge where the laser
treatment ends.
But seeing the aberrations before surgery allows
doctors to adjust, shaving off a little more tissue here and a little less there
– leaving a smoother surface and crisper vision, explains Dr. Stephen Brint
of Tulane University, who helped test Alcon Laboratories' system.
The Food and Drug Administration recently approved
both Alcon and Visx's wavefront-guided
LASIK systems after studies showed about 80 percent of patients treated saw
20/20 without glasses. It adds $350 to $1,000 to LASIK's
$1,000- to $2,000-per-eye cost.
"It is life-altering," says Beth
Matthews of
Her longtime eye doctor wouldn't let her have
regular LASIK. Matthews had so many higher-order aberrations that, even with
strong contact lenses, she squinted at road signs and could barely see at night
through the glare. After wavefront-guided surgery,
her vision measures a crisp 20/16 – better than perfect, with no glare or squinting.
But wavefront-guided
LASIK still causes new aberrations, just fewer of them, cautions FDA's Everette Beers.
And it doesn't eliminate the need for careful
screening – not everyone's a candidate, adds Ron Link, who runs a Web site,
www.surgicaleyes.com,
for LASIK-injured patients.
Take David Dutton of
Dutton, a teacher in
Check the latest LASIK guidelines at www.eyesurgeryeducation.org
– and check out the surgeon's track record.
"So much of the outcome has to do with patient selection ... and physician experience and competence," says FDA's Beers.
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