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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Laser Eye Surgery for my -7.50 contact lens prescription

44 replies

boble1 · 27/12/2021 12:08

Hi

I've been wearing contacts forever and currently have a corneal ulcer so Im back in glasses for the time being and I hate them.

I have dry eyes and have been told that as I wear my contacts for too long each day, one day I will not be able to wear them at all.

I'm in agony with the corneal ulcer and think now is the time to look into laser eye surgery.

I think I'd prefer to go to Moorfield as I have such a high prescription.

The thought of a corneal flap rather makes my stomach turn and I understand that the flap never completely heals.

I see there is another type of surgery (PRK) where they don't make a flap but the recovery time is longer.

Has anyone had such a high prescription as mine and had laser eye surgery? Not quite sure what my prescription is in glasses but my contacts are a -7.50.

Thank you

OP posts:
Roselilly36 · 27/12/2021 19:58

Do it Op, it’s one of the best decisions I made, my only regret is not having done sooner, I had lasik in 2008.

Tiggytico · 27/12/2021 20:04

I had mine done in 2006. This was the review I wrote shortly afterwards (copied and pasted for you! Changed my life. 15 years ago, so no doubt things have moved on lots since then!

Surgery type – Epi-lasik
Pre surgery prescription – right Sph -7.00, Cyl -0.5, Axis 120 left Sph -7.00, Cyl -0.5, Axis 100
RESULT – One line BETTER than 20/20

I had worn glasses since the age of about 5, and then contact lenses from the age of 14. For the most of the time I found lenses to be a good solution. Admittedly they were a slight inconvenience everyday and evening, when flying (due to aircon) and when wanting to participate in watersports. However, over the last few years I have increasing been suffering from the effects of hayfever. With itchy eyes, wearing contacts was impossible. I hated wearing glasses. With such a high prescription, it was impossible to have really thin and lightweight lenses and because I’d worn contacts for such a long time, I felt that glasses no longer suited me. For having contacts at the age of 14 I’d been very shy; contact lenses gave me confidence and wearing glasses again in my late twenties took me back to those awkward early teen years!

I first seriously looked into laser eye surgery in December 2005. I visited one provider – who I can not fault, but they were unable to treat me. I have really thin corneas and with such a high prescription it was not possible. I was recommended to have implantable lenses. I really didn’t fancy having such an invasive procedure at the time and having always been pleased with contact lenses, I didn’t think about it any further. From about March to July 2006 I found myself having to wear glasses again due to a particularly bad hayfever season. Decided enough was enough and that I would have implantable lenses. Before I decided on which provider to trust with my eyes, I made appointments with two other clinics for second and third opinions. The second clinic I visited was Accuvision and I was so pleased when they told me that they would be able to treat my eyes with laser surgery rather than implantable lenses. The third clinic, again recommended implantable lenses. I admit that I was so excited that I had already booked my treatment with Accuvision before I had attended the third clinic, but just wanted to make sure that I had as much information as possible.

I visited the Solihull clinic as this was within travelling distance. My consultant was Nick and he took the time to explain my eyes and the procedure fully and answer all of my questions. There was no hard sell at all – none what so ever, almost the opposite. Nick was very honest and told me that with my prescription I was unlikely to get 20/20 vision, but I should only need glasses for maybe driving and watching television. That was good enough for me.

I booked my treatment for a Thursday (2 days before my 30th birthday) and arrived at the Solihull clinic with my mum for support. I was so excited that I didn’t even get nervous until about 5 minutes before the procedure. The actual procedure was so quick and I can’t really say that it hurt. Not pleasant, but not dissimilar to going to the dentist. I must have been in the ‘operating’ room for about 10 minutes max and the actual procedure only took about 1 minute per eye. My surgeon Chad was wonderful. I spent half an hour in the waiting room afterwards with my eyes shut before Nick saw me again and told me that I was already above driving standard! As I had epi-lasik, the recovery time was a lot longer than normal lasik. Others in the waiting room looked extremely comfortable, whilst my eyes were still very sensitive. I stayed in a nearby hotel with my mum on the night of the procedure, as my mum doesn’t drive. I couldn’t make it for dinner that evening (having normal lasik, I understand that you’d be back to normal within hours) and I was glad to have my mum on hand to administer the eye drops. Had an uncomfortable night (but not painful) and when I went to the clinic the following morning for my check-up, Nick was pleased with my progress. I then made the journey home, by train, but spent most of it with my eyes shut as they were very very light sensitive. Spent the rest of the day at home with the curtains shut! Saturday was my 30th birthday and my husband had arranged a surprise meal with my friends and family. He was nervous about having to cancel it, but with the help of some anaesthetic drops I was able to go out and enjoy my birthday. Sunday was a lot better, but still wearing my sunglasses when outside (sunny August though). However, by Monday I was as right as rain and back to work!

I had another check-up on the Wednesday and Nick confirmed that I was one line BETTER than 20/20. I have since had two further check-ups and am pleased to confirm that I am still better than 20/20.

Although my recovery sounds a bit daunting for the first couple of days, please, please, please bear in mind that I had epi-lasik. Regular eye surgery is far less traumatic. I would go through the recovery a thousand times to get the wonderful results I have had. Implantable lenses is similar to having cataracts done. There is a two week recovery time for each eye and you need to have each eye done separately. My eyes were all done and dusted within 4 days. I decided to have both eyes done at the same time. It’s personal preference, but it was my belief that if I though something would go wrong then there’d be no way that I’d be having any eyes done! I’m pleased that I had them done at the same time.

Sorry it’s such a long review, but when I was doing my research I couldn’t find that many from people who had had to have epi-lasik, so hope this helps others. Visit as many clinics as you can. Accuvision specialise in ‘specialist’ cases – if you get a ‘no’ from one clinic, it doesn’t mean that you’re untreatable. Different clinics have different procedures, equipment and surgeons.

Having laser eye surgery has changed my life and I can not recommend Accuvision enough.

boble1 · 27/12/2021 20:09

Oh wow!

Thank you so much for all the responses :)

I'm definitely going to call Moorfields and go for it!

I think watching You Tube videos really put me off the flap. I don't like eyes or feet :(

I really hope I can have it done, I hope my dry eyes and corneal ulcer don't get in the way.

I'd love to wake up and be able to see clearly!

OP posts:
TheHoptimist · 27/12/2021 20:12

David Gartry

wimpoleeyeclinic.com

Stressybetty · 27/12/2021 20:17

Following this for updates. My prescription is -11.5 and -13.5 and have dry eyes. Would love to get them done but terrified I'll end up worse off

thebestever · 27/12/2021 20:24

I also had David Gartry. He's done 30,000 laser eye surgeries including the first in the UK. He and his surgeries (Moorfields Private and Wimpole) are excellent.

£4,600 all in, including two years' aftercare. I can't recommend him enough, beat thing I ever did.

minipie · 27/12/2021 20:26

StressyBetty I got in touch with Mr Gartry’s secretary and emailed my prescription (& dry eye diagnosis) for him to look at and give an initial view. Perhaps you could do the same, that way if it’s a no go at least you will find out without paying for a consultation?

FWIW his view was that I was “borderline” at -10 plus mild astigmatism. I think there may be changes in what they can do in future though especially with SMILE, but it’s still very new.

SoonbeSpringtime · 27/12/2021 20:33

@SilverHairedCat It's absolutely nothing at all like you fear I promise you and the results are totally life changing. It's no more than a trip to the hair salon and not as bad as a dental check up.

I had lens replacements and two lots of laser. It wasn't painful or freaky or made me feel squeamish and the results were instant. I walked out of the hospital without any dressings or eye coverings apart from big ass sunglasses for the glare. There were no bruises or any disfigurement.

One thing I would recommend from personal experience, is go to a recommended and experienced surgeon in an NHS or private hospital. I'm less keen on clinics that do a lot of marketing and offer discounts pressuring you to sign up, although I'm sure their surgeons are also reputable.

Rahforpuss · 27/12/2021 22:08

Mine were a similar prescription and I had them done 7 years ago. Successful in that I no longer needed glasses for anything but was still at about - 0.75/1 which was wonderful. After a few years they started to deteriorate, needing glasses for driving. Continued to deteriorate and I'm at -4 ish now. I expect them to deteriorate more. I'm not going to get them re-done every 5 years so it's back to contacts for me. I would still say it was worth it though.

Sadsammy · 27/12/2021 22:23

Does your prescription have to be particularly bad? What if it's -4? Also, is there an age limit?

DontBlameMe79 · 27/12/2021 22:31

I would at least google “problems with laser eye surgery” and get another perspective. Your vision is so precious that doing anything that risks it needs to be carefully considered and there are risks that they will inform you of (but not many listen to.

Would be interesting to compare the risk of losing your vision with laser to the risk of dying from Covid or the covid vaccine.

dylanthedragon · 27/12/2021 22:38

My prescription is similar -7.5 in one eye and -6.5 in the other. I've been thinking about laser surgery for years and hear lots of positive stories but I am so squeamish about my eyes. Despite wearing contacts for 30 years now, I stuggle with the puff of air test at the optician and have to hold the back of my head to stop my reaction of pulling away. During the surgery, do you have to hold still and keep your eyes open youself of are you numb in any way? Rwally I wish I could be put under a general anaesthetic and wake up with it done!

Also, I had hear that if you have a corneal flap, if your sight then deteriorates again, you can't wear contact lenses. Does anyone know if this is true?

boble1 · 27/12/2021 22:55

I have been researching and it says that the corneal flap never truly heals.

If you are a kickboxer or in the army, they recommend PRK, where there is no flap.

You can get hazing too.

There are lots of people writing about their experiences on Reddit and I've joined a FB group.

I'd hate to be told that I could never wear contacts again and after suffering immense pain from a corneal ulcer just before Christmas, it has made me think seriously about getting laser surgery.

I have to admit, I am totally terrified. Iv been wearing contacts for 33 years. Ive got ghost blood vessels from lack of oxygen, very dry eyes, and I would hate to have to wear glasses full time.

I really don't get on with them as the peripheral vision is so blurry.

I think Id like to get one eye done at a time.

OP posts:
ZZTopGuitarSolo · 27/12/2021 23:11

I had mine done over 15 years ago. I'm assuming the flap healed fine as my optician said she could barely see the scar and said she would not have noticed it was there if I hadn't told her I'd had LASIK.

I do get some startbursts at night when driving. Its never been a problem.

My prescription was stronger than yours and I have had excellent distance vision since I had it done. Best decision I ever made.

Flipsockflop · 27/12/2021 23:15

Wow I would really love this but I believe you have to have a stable prescription for 2 years? Mine deteriorates yearly and I’m currently -7.50 in both eyes (39yo)

I also have a lot of floaters, does any of the other posters have any floaters and would this also make me a bad candidate? Or can laser help with those too?

I’d be so happy to get to a lower prescription where I could choose nice glasses, mine are so thick they look terrible so I wear contacts daily but am now starting with dry eyes.

sweetkitty · 27/12/2021 23:29

I had LASIK 19 years ago at Moorfields (can’t remember surgeon) I was -6.5 in both eyes. It was utterly life changing for me. I still have better than 20/20 vision in both eyes no problems whatsoever. Best money I ever spent.

Toomanyradishes · 27/12/2021 23:32

@elodie9 if you are starting to get cataracts and have a high prescription look into varifocal lens replacement, this is like the lens replacement you would end up needing for the cataracts but with the added benefit of not needing reading glasses afterwards

Elodie9 · 28/12/2021 21:27

Thank you Toomanyradishes, I will have a read up on it. It is good to know that there could be options out there .

boble1 · 14/01/2022 09:43

Hi

I wondered, has anyone had their eyes done at the Centre for Sight?

Sheraz Daya has been recommended and he is supposed to be wonderful.

Thank you

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