Throw Out Your Glasses After Using Lasik Eye Surgery
Some of us are born with perfect 20/20 vision. Others are not and must rely on contacts or eye glasses in order to read or see thing at a far distance. Many people will live with these special eye wear for years and will spend hundreds of dollars replacing broken glasses and getting more contacts when they run out. However, there are options to those who do not wish to continue wearing and purchasing this particular eyewear.
Lasik eye surgery stands for a laser in situ keratomileusis. This means that a laser is used underneath the cornea flap in the eye that works to reshape the cornea (also known as the keratomileusis). This procedure uses a highly specialized laser that is used to treat refractive problems, eliminate or reduce the need a person has to use contact lenses or glasses, and to improve vision.
The procedure also helps to alter the shape of the cornea. The cornea is the transparent covering of the eye. Though the excimer laser was used for many years before the development of Lasik eye surgery. This surgery was first created by Ioannis Pallikaris from Greece in 1991.
During this Lasik eye surgery a specially trained eye surgeon will create a very precise, thin hinged corneal flap that uses a microkeratome. The surgeon will then pull the flap back in order to expose the corneal tissue beneath. Then the excimer laser will reshape the cornea in a unique pattern that is specific to the particular patient. After it has been reshaped the flap will be repositioned gently onto the underlying cornea without the use of any sutures.