Laser Eye Surgery

March 7th, 2009

Wow this is amazing….medical students out there here is a bible for you to get your teeth into…all about gross anatomy…click here

Welcome to FOCUS - Laser eye surgery in London

January 24th, 2012

We welcome you to our boutique laser eye surgery and KAMRA clinic in the heart of the Harley Street enclave of London. Over the years we have been pioneering laser eye surgery and reading vision treatments and in 2011 achieved groundbreaking results - 100% of our short sight patients achieve 20/20 vision or better after treatment. We also introduced our revolutionary KAMRA treatment which corrects vision in those needing lenses or glasses for reading vision. At Focus we’re a close knit family of surgeons, optometrists and patient care coordinators who’s main goal is customer safety, care and results. We look after the people we see and take great pride in doing so.

lasik

January 21st, 2012

lasik eye surgery vision correction protection laser hospital precision glasses opthamology surgeon

My LASEK Eye Surgery

January 17th, 2012

So Im a filmmaker and yet my first contribution is a video of my LASEK (Not LASIK) surgery. I had my surgery done at Park Avenue Laser in NYC by Dr. Emil Chynn who I highly recommend if you.re thinking about the surgery. It.s four days later and Im still a little blurry, but hey, I was able to edit this video together and upload it, so there.s progress.

PreOp® Patient Education: Lasik Laser Eye Surgery

January 16th, 2012

www.PreOp.com Patient ED @ 617-379-1582 INFO Laser Eye Surgery is a relatively simple and nonintrusive procedure that is designed to reduce or eliminate the need for glasses or contact lenses. Patient Education LASIK laser surgery generally does not have any effect on a patient’s overall health and there are no risks in choosing not to have the surgery. Patient Education LASIK Laser Eye Surgery

LASEK Treatment at Optilase

January 10th, 2012

Lasek or Laser-Assisted Sub-Epithelial Keratectomy, is a well established method of preparing the surface of the eye for Laser vision correction in patients for whom LASIK is not recommended. The decision as to which procedure is best for you will be made in consultation with your Optilase Laser Optometrist and Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon. In LASEK, a portion of the surface layer of cells (Epithelium) of your eye is softened using an Ethanol solution and gently moved aside. The laser is then applied to the underlying surface to reshape your cornea and correct your prescription. A contact lens is put in place over your cornea for a period of five days to provide comfort and protection to the surface as it heals. For further details about lasek laser treatment visit www.optilase.com

Lasik in Istanbul, EyeSTAR Lasik Norwegian Patient Testimonial

January 9th, 2012

Norwegian patient at EyeSTAR Lasik in Istanbul talks about her eye laser treatment experience.

Lasik in Istanbul, EyeSTAR Lasik Norwegian Patient Testimonial

January 6th, 2012

Norwegian patient at EyeSTAR Lasik in Istanbul talks about her eye laser treatment experience.

Lasik in Istanbul, EyeSTAR Lasik Norwegian Patient Testimonial

January 2nd, 2012

Norwegian patient at EyeSTAR Lasik in Istanbul talks about her eye laser treatment experience.

Paul Kuck, MD

January 1st, 2012

Meet Paul Kuck, MD. He is an ophthalmologist or eye surgeon at Gundersen Lutheran in La Crosse, Wisconsin. His medical interests include advanced small incision cataract surgery, corneal transplant, lamellar transplant and endothelial transplants of the cornea, diseases and surgery of the anterior segment, intraocular phakic and non-phakic IOL for presbyopia and high hyperopia/myopia, laser vision correction (LASIK, LASEK, PRK), medical and laser treatment of retinal disease (diabetic retinopathy and macular degeneration), ICL refractive, descemet’s stripping endothelial keratoplasty (DSEK), computers in medicine, sports medicine and the eye.

Laser Eye Surgery

December 31st, 2011

I had my eyes done not to wear glasses any more. The entire surgery has been taped. This is how it is done on one eye (only half of the movie but you get to see all of how it happens). I removed the ability to add comments because the same questions keep coming up. People do not read the thread and just post their same old questions all over. I have other things to attend to but answering the same 5 questions eternally. So if you have questions related to the surgery and how it happens (although it should be obvious on the vid already) then ask you surgeon or Google them. Here are the top asked (serious) questions and the answers. - Risks: It is risky, things can go wrong and when they do it is *VERY* bad because fixing them damaged eyes always results in worse sight and life than before you touched them to start with. Risks increase with the surgeon’s poor skills. Always ask around about the reputation of your surgeon and beware of cheap ones. Good surgeons have very low risk rates and the ugly ones are awful. The risk stats you will read in the net are like 5% it goes wrong, that is an average across all surgeons. Don’t think any surgeon has a 5% failure. It is usually 99,9% or 50%. - Price: depends on the surgeon, as stated above beware of the cheapo’s. I paid 2700 euro’s. Recent reports of friends that went to the same surgeon reported 3000 euro’s. That is for both eyes. If you have a guy offering 500$ for an eye (or both), run away! - Dry eyes: You get drops to keep


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