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Refractive Surgery Basics

Refractive surgery is a group of surgical procedures designed to help you reduce or even eliminate your need for glasses or contact lenses. Various procedures are available to help correct the various types of refractive errors: myopia, hyperopia, and astigmatism.

Myopia is also called nearsightedness you can see well up close without glasses but need glasses to see well at a distance. Myopia arises when the front surface of your eye called the cornea is steeper than usual. Hyperopia is far-sightedness you cannot see well up close and usually cannot see well at a distance either. People with hyperopia often have flatter than usual corneas. Astigmatism is a mixture of myopia and hyperopia your cornea is warped like the shape of a saddle.

Refractive surgery improves your vision by changing the focus power of your eye. This is accomplished by altering either of the two focusing structures of the eye the cornea and the lens. The cornea or lens can be altered by various surgical techniques.

The most common refractive surgery procedure of the cornea is LASIK (laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis). In LASIK, laser energy is used to reshape your cornea, essentially sculpting your prescription into your eye. If the laser energy were applied directly to the surface of your eye, the treated area would be sore for several days during the healing process. To avoid this discomfort, a thin flap is cut on the surface of your cornea, then folded out of the way. Laser energy is then used to sculpt your exposed cornea to correct your nearsightedness, then the flap is put back into its normal position, covering the treated area. LASIK is nearly painless, highly successful, and you can see the improvement in your vision immediately after surgery. A slightly different procedure, called LASEK (laser epithelial keratomileusis), uses a thinner flap, and is typically performed in people whose cornea is too thin or too flat for LASIK. A third type of corneal refractive surgery is called PRK (photorefractive keratectomy), which differs from LASIK and LASEK in that no flap is made--the laser directly sculpts the front surface of your cornea to flatten it.

There are two common refractive surgery procedures of the lens. One is implantation of an ICL (intraocular contact lens). An ICL is essentially a contact lens, but instead of being placed on the surface of your eye, it is permanently placed inside your eye. The implant rests on the surface of your natural lens, behind your iris. The strength of the implant is specifically selected to work with your cornea and lens to correct your refractive error. The second procedure is called RLE (refractive lens exchange). Refractive lens exchange involves removing your lens and replacing it with a lens implant that works with your cornea to correct your refractive error.

Each of these procedures has different risks and benefits, and each is designed for a different group of people based on the type and severity of their refractive error. If you are considering having refractive surgery, talk with your doctor about which procedure is best for your eyes.

Richard C. Rodman, M.D.

Dr. Richard Rodman is a board-certified ophthalmologist, cornea specialist and LASIK surgeon. Dr. Rodman has been performing Laser Vision Correction since 1996, and has completed nearly 2000 excimer laser procedures. In addition, he has performed over 4,000 cataract and intraocular lens (IOL) procedures. Dr. Rodman offers his patients multifocal and accommodating IOL’s  (Restor, ReZoom, and Crystalens) to improve near vision, and Toric IOL’s to correct astigmatism.

Dr. Rodman attended Brown University, in Providence, RI, and Brown University School of Medicine, where he graduated with academic distinction. He completed an internship in Internal Medicine at Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge, MA. He then entered a residency in Ophthalmology at the University of Michigan’s W.K. Kellogg Eye Center, where he was selected to serve as a Chief Resident. Dr. Rodman completed a Cornea & Laser Vision Correction fellowship at the renown Wills Eye Hospital of Philadelphia, PA.

Dr. Rodman is a Clinical Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology at Brown University School of Medicine, where he teaches residents to perform corneal surgery and LASIK. He has lectured extensively in the area of LASIK, refractive cataract surgery, and Laser Vision Correction. Dr. Rodman is a member of the American Academy of Ophthalmology, the International Society of Refractive Surgeons, the American Society of Cataract & Refractive Surgeons, the New England Ophthalmologic Society, and The Massachusetts Society of Eye Physicians & Surgeons.