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"FLAPLESS"
LASIK MYTHS
“Flapless”
LASIK is being used by some laser centers as a clever marketing
technique to raise needless concern about flaps.
This ultimately increases their business since patients think
they will get better results with a lot less risk than traditional LASIK. Here are the Myths and Realities of “Flapless” LASIK:
MYTH #1:
Halos, double vision, and
glare are caused by the flap in the LASIK procedure
REALITY #1:
These complications have
almost NOTHING to do with the flaps!
Halos,
double vision, and glare are caused mostly by older lasers which treated
too small of an area or placed the treatment off-center.
Our lasers treat large areas and are customizable.
Plus both of our lasers track your eye movements to avoid any
off-center treatments. In
our office, LASIK patients do not encounter these problems.
MYTH #2:
From the competitor’s website - “The revolutionary technique
that makes it possible to go flapless is called "Advanced Surface
Ablation."”
REALITY #2:
The real name for the technique is “LASEK” with an “E”.
It has been around since the late 90’s, so it hardly qualifies
as “revolutionary”. In
LASEK the top layer of cells of the cornea is removed by killing
the cells with a toxic ethyl alcohol solution.
After the laser treats the vision, the dead cell layer is placed
back on the cornea. This
technique was originally thought to be better than the older method of
simply removing the top layer and throwing away (“PRK”), but has
proved to offer little advantage over PRK.
Most surgeons who choose to do a surface treatments are now
reverting to PRK, since no study could demonstrate convincingly that
laying the dead cells back on the eye actually helped with the end
result. Today, very few of
the top refractive surgeons are doing “LASEK” as a routine
procedure. LASIK is still
#1, with PRK done for special conditions.
REALITY #3 -
What they don’t tell you: Since
there are pain nerves in the epithelium, removing these cells leads to
eye pain for several days after “flapless” LASIK.
Traditional LASIK patients feel fine in just a few hours after
the surgery, and feel almost perfect the day after!
REALITY
#4 - While the creation of the flap does pose certain risks, the
technology and equipment employed at Flowers & Suder Vision
Institute are the most advanced and accurate available.
Even if a flap is not made quite perfectly, the eye heals and can
undergo future laser vision correction with great success.
Flap complications are indeed rare and do not cause any real
problems, and are virtually all “fixable”.
CONCLUSION:
“Flapless” LASIK is an older method to treat the eye with
laser correction in which the top layer of cells is killed with a toxic
chemical. There is little
advantage to such a procedure given the advancement of flap-making
technology which produces consistent, reliable, and reproducible corneal
flaps quite safely. With
the added pain and additional weeks of blurry vision,
"flapless" patients are less happy than their "flap"
LASIK counterparts. |