(Optometrist here) As with any surgery, there is always a risk that the outcome isn't what was aimed for. I think in your case, with such a high refractive error (and previously thought to be outside of what could be corrected for with LASIK, PRK, SMILE etc), the introduction of aberrations to your right eye is the likely cause of your issues. These aberrations are worse with a larger pupil. Some lasers used in refractive surgery use wavefront guided ablations to minimise these issues. PRK is also used when the corneal thickness (usually 520 to 540 micron) is deemed too thin, and/or, the desired correction is very high, as in your case. You may have had the option of an implanted collamer lens (ICL) but that depends on a few things as well but these are at least reversible in case of complications. Some patients have a clear lens extraction with lens replacement, where they remove your lens inside your eye and replace it with a new lens, correcting for your refractive error. In your case, perhaps a simple pair of glasses may help. You may also have a small postop refractive error that may be able to be corrected and used for night driving. New ophthalmic lens designs can, in some cases also improve clarity. Even choice of lens material can reduce chromatic aberration. Good luck.
@zawhernos2541 Жыл бұрын
So I really don't get full benefit from lasik ? I get some but I lose some?
@ayoCC Жыл бұрын
@@zawhernos2541 it seems like an upside of prk is that you can do a caratact replacement later if stuff sucks for you. Sucking out the lens juice and replacing it with new, clear lens juice.
@zawhernos2541 Жыл бұрын
@@ayoCC I hope it's a one time thing I just wanna do it and then forget
@dvl973 Жыл бұрын
@@zawhernos2541 my Z lasik surgery went great and I don't have any problems phantom vision or anything and I see better than ever before tho astigmatism in my right eye could not be corrected completely because my corneas are too thin. Still my vision is great.
@theglowcloud2215 Жыл бұрын
@billy4eyes, dude, let's be real: LASIK and PRK have led to negative patient outcomes for SO many people that it's become plainly obvious the procedures themselves are higher risk than the typical outpatient surgery. This shit ruins people's lives yet is blithely recommended by quack opthamologists who don't have their patients' best interests in mind. LASIK is a huge cash cow and the profit motive is strong (as is true in so many medical specialties these days).
@trisymphony Жыл бұрын
The fear of not being able to see properly after surgery is why I could never do it, no matter how bad my eyes ever get. Hope you get better eventually!
@luizcastro5246 Жыл бұрын
yeah, i guess the fear of losing things should stop you from making your life better, i better cower in my bed for the rest of my life just in case i step on a bug or something
@shsu2020 Жыл бұрын
@@luizcastro5246 it's not that simple. The result is irreversible and people are rarely correctly informed about what to expect. It has nothing to do with fear. If you don't know how the result will be fear is irrelevant. Even if you are fearless and you think that your vision will be perfect, you will get disappointed when you get surprised by the compromises you will have to live with.
@coconutflour9868 Жыл бұрын
@@luizcastro5246 jeez man let people make their own decisions in peace
@blandgreen4135 Жыл бұрын
@@luizcastro5246 this is not taking a risk on a relationship or a new job. Its the function that lets you do almost everything. Not wearing goggles while working with power tools is not "living life and not being afraid". Its just being safe. I had no idea about all of these possible vision problems that could occur with lasik or pkr. But contacts are easy enough and I can always take them out and use something else if I want. There's no undoing the surgery. It's risk vs reward here not failing to live life because of your fear.
@OverruledDood Жыл бұрын
@@luizcastro5246 hope the responses to this bait gives you whatever fullfillment you're not getting out of life.
@indjuweg Жыл бұрын
I'm an optician myself and I always tell people the same thing. You need to wonder why most eye specialist wears glasses and don't opt for surgery
@donkeizluv Жыл бұрын
this explains alot. Thanks
@CoveringFish Жыл бұрын
What about no flap surgery
@minhuang8848 Жыл бұрын
what a load of nonsense, the vast majority of eye specialists doesn't wear glasses in the first place, what is this ill-informed fear-mongering and just because specialists, who are just as prone to personal biases, preferences, and fears as the next person, doesn't mean they have to follow their advice, nor does it mean that the treatment highly scrutinized professionals offer is bogus. Especially not LASIK, by far one of the safest and most surefire procedures... even considering that people with such a severe prescription incur a higher risk of failure or diminished results. Educate yourself.
@BirdiesGoCherp Жыл бұрын
Because as surgeons, their life depends on being able to see extremely well. Taking a 0.1% risk isn't even worth it.
@Hungerking_official Жыл бұрын
What is your view about co2 laser for skin resurfacing , for scars Please tell my doc says i need 10-15 sitting
@nspgreen Жыл бұрын
I had PRK back in 2014, and suffered from the starburst effect for several months. However, it did eventually go away and I’ve been very happy with the results. It’s improved my quality of life more than anything else I can think of.
@kisong1960 Жыл бұрын
Me too! It did go away on its own. I just put the lubrication drops few times a day and i am good to go
@robovac3557 Жыл бұрын
Can you guys read 8 font from 10 feet away now? Do you find people are intimidated by your eyesight?
@Eksayle Жыл бұрын
@@robovac3557 I had Lasik done ~6 months ago. My latest checkup placed me above 20/20. 20/15 easily, and "almost" 20/10. I'm in my 30s and wore glasses (or contacts) starting back when I was in the 2nd grade. My girlfriend says I'm not allowed to look at her ankles on the days she doesn't shave them. 😞
@Derzull2468 Жыл бұрын
Go back to sucking dust, @@robovac3557
@popenieafantome9527 Жыл бұрын
I get plenty of starburst effects from my glasses
@MrMoogle Жыл бұрын
So glad you made this! The next time someone asks me about laser eye surgery, I'm sending them to this video rather than try to explain it myself. Most don't realize LASIK and PRK are a thing, they just assume all laser eye surgery is LASIK since that's what gets advertised the most. I had PRK in 2011 after my eye surgeon suggested it over LASIK, with the caveat that the recovery time would be longer. I'm glad I went with PRK. 12 years later, I'm thankful to report I don't have any issues with dry eyes or starbursts. The most annoying long-term effect for me has been extreme light sensitivity. I simply cannot be outside without sunglasses, even on a cloudy day. Otherwise, my eyes immediately tear up uncontrollably. I also noticed my vision for objects very close up did take a bit of a hit after the surgery. Sorry to hear about the starburst and dry eye issues you are having. That sounds very annoying for sure. Oh yeah, and even after 12 years without having glasses, I still occasionally reach up to my face to adjust them, haha.
@KilianGosewisch Жыл бұрын
Your light sensitivity sounds similar to mine. But i was born that way. it's annoying, but tolerable IMHO
@MrMoogle Жыл бұрын
@@KilianGosewisch for sure. If anything it probably makes me take better care of my eyes than most with all the UV protection. Since, you know, I kind of have to or I look like I'm crying, haha.
@scbtripwire Жыл бұрын
I still wear glasses, but your closing anecdote made me chuckle. I occasionally look for my glasses while wearing them... oof!
@mujtabaalam5907 Жыл бұрын
But didn't the guy say PRK was what gave him the side effects?
@vasea2499 Жыл бұрын
Some months ago i found out i have bad vision and observed i have starbursts, at night its a pain to see in a city with a lot of lights but i cant and i wont do any eye surgerys
@bobowon5450 Жыл бұрын
I've always had Starbursts in my vision. I asked about Lazer eye surgery to fix my poor vision. They warned me that if I didn't already have Starbursts that I might get them from surgery. That's when I found out that not everyone is completely and utterly blinded by all lights at night. I feel biologically cheated
@McShortnBig Жыл бұрын
Mileage varies and healing is different for everyone and not saying its a guarantee but I had starbursts before prk and none after!
@BreadAndGatorade Жыл бұрын
I had starburst for many years. Saw a couple specialists when I was younger all said they saw nothing wrong. Finally pulled the trigger on PRK. Starbursts are marginally worse than prior to surgery but I still have driven through the night. I guess I don’t mind because I had it for so much of my life. But if I never had and got them post-op I would probably be pissed. It’s hard to say because I don’t remember not having them so a slight worsening but not having to wear glasses is worth it for me.
@megamaser Жыл бұрын
Everyone has starbursts in their vision. It's an inevitable quality of all lenses. It does occur to varying degrees though. But main difference is how much we are consciously aware of it. Some people are not very discerning about these things, so they don't realize they have it.
@bobowon5450 Жыл бұрын
@me-ye6ld didn't end up getting it. Went through all the prep and at the last minute the cost jumped from 1k to 6k so I backed out
@The.Hawaiian.Kingdom Жыл бұрын
@BreadandGatorade Do you have an Astigmatism? That’s a very common cause of starbursts.
@LPR44 Жыл бұрын
Hey Taran, sorry that didn't work for you! I used to have a -14 & -16 prescription plus astigmatism, so none of the laser surgeries were an option. Thankfully ICL (kinda new) came up as an alternative and it has been a godsend. It is more expensive because the implants are made to order and not many ophthalmologists feel comfortable with it, but it has been 6-7 years and besides the first week after surgery, I have never had any problems with it. Pros: - Reversible, the implant can be removed or replaced in case your prescription changes - It doesn't remove or reshape the eye, so if the implant is removed, you just return to your original prescription - Less side-effects than any of the laser surgeries - Works for more severe prescriptions Cons: - More expensive (5-15x the price of LASIK) - Newer, so if any long-term side effects exist, we don't know them yet Overall, 100% recommended if you can pay for it. Edit: One thing Ido share with the others is the light sensitivity, but a pair of sunglasses by my door and in the car take care of that.
@mrsubrange Жыл бұрын
i was told that it's a bit problematic to mess with the inner or the eyes - it's risky and could result in increased risk of retinal detachment - which is why I said no thanks. But when we're old, it's a good procedure because everyone will replace their lenses anyway (cataract surgery). It should be almost the same procedure, ICL vs cataract surgery, as I understood it...
@Ramon314 Жыл бұрын
I am currently at -12 and it is still getting worse over time. When my eyes are stable I really want this surgery. Cool to see someone who had this surgery and being so positive about it.
@mrsubrange Жыл бұрын
@@Ramon314 sorry, I meant: when we're old, it's called CLE - alternative to cataract surgery. Cataract is considered really close to 100% safe - get lenses exchanged with lenses that reduces or eliminates near sightedness...
@LadyBovine Жыл бұрын
@@Ramon314 I had -10 or so each eye, and it's been fantastic, so good luck on stabilizing vision, i know that frustration.
@EvilNeuro Жыл бұрын
@@mrsubrange retina damage? I already have my retina cells dying so idm
@MikeC1 Жыл бұрын
Have thought of laser eye correction in passing several times throughout my life. Always came to the conclusion that I'd rather wear glasses than risk complications. I probably won't seriously consider any eye surgery until I'm losing or at risk or losing my sight.
@MrCipasa Жыл бұрын
At that point its too late
@MikeC1 Жыл бұрын
@@MrCipasa Too late for what? To lose my sight early with an elective procedure?
@MG-ks1qg10 ай бұрын
Doctor Probst with TLC Laser Eye Centers in rockford IL is excellent. He wrote several books on it
@MrCipasa10 ай бұрын
@@MikeC1 eye correction is not magic, it doesn't cure near blindness. And the bigger correction you do, the higher the risk.
@dennispremoli7950 Жыл бұрын
I literally just had a convo with my optometrist about this. He said that it is surprisingly common for people getting this kind of surgery for astigmatism, to regret it.
@ge2719 Жыл бұрын
you mean its common for people gettign surgery for astigmatism to regret it, or people who get surgery and regret it because they develop cases of astigmatism?
@wobblysauce Жыл бұрын
The prior… Eye shape is different to lenses
@alexzoin Жыл бұрын
Well this just confirmed that I am not going to do the surgery.
@folkrav Жыл бұрын
Oh, wow. I've had glasses for 2 years, I hate it so much, but hey, I see clearly and no more headaches. I did wonder about Lasik surgery, but never really took the step of looking it up. Will definitely do check it really closely now that you say this, as I'm basically only dealing with astigmatism in both eyes.
@michaellhoover94 Жыл бұрын
@@wobblysauce It would be the latter or the former. Both statements are prior.
@25566 Жыл бұрын
This is why I'll keep using contact lenses, 20/20 vision and no weird stuff at night. I considered the surgery but it would take me like 14 years to break even instead of just using contacts. And the risks, and seeing so many optometrists with glasses made me suspicious 🤓
@graealex Жыл бұрын
There are a few jobs that require somewhat decent vision without glasses or contacts. For example, pilots, and in many countries even becoming a police officer.
@alex_MCMXCV Жыл бұрын
u think Taran could get 20/20 vision with just contacts?
@hapybratt8640 Жыл бұрын
@@graealexpilots can use corrective lenses, it's a myth that they cant as far as I am aware
@graealex Жыл бұрын
@@hapybratt8640 They can use lenses obviously, to some degree. What I was pointing out is that some jobs require at least some reasonably good vision without any corrective measures. For example, many airlines want you to have no more than +/- 3 dpt without any corrective measures (and 0 dpt WITH measures). And just don't call everything a myth if it takes less than 30 seconds to verify.
@hapybratt8640 Жыл бұрын
@@graealex well it is a myth that they aren't allowed to use lenses, because they are almost universally. Maybe some small air force in some country requires it but by and large pilots can use lenses
@seefzi Жыл бұрын
I'm glad I watched this. As someone who has lived with glasses most of my life, I'd always thought about getting lasik, and every time I heard about it, I heard about how easy, cheap and safe it was. Never did anyone mention there would be permanent side effects like those starbursts, or the ability of the flap to open back up. The dry eyes issue would probably be the worst overall - I already have such a complicated and picky sleeping routine that the mildest of annoyances keeps me awake.
@TaranVH Жыл бұрын
Dry eyes after LASIK is the most common side effect. I read 40% of ppl get it
@gripen777 Жыл бұрын
It's a gambit to be sure. My dad was legally blind without his glasses before he had LASIK and was able to see fine afterwards, but I know some people that got messed up by it.
@CalgarGTX Жыл бұрын
You realize he said in the vid he *didnt* get lasik but the alternative method right ? In my small irrelevant sample size of me and multiple coworkers wanting to get rid of contacts/glasses while working on computers all day, the ones including me that got lasik never had dry eyes problems but the ones who couldn't get it due to small cornea and went with the alternative methods are the ones who had dry eyes for ages... Also that flap isn't gonna go anywhere unless you get elbowed in the eye 15 minutes after the procedure. But tbh depending on your age it might not be worth it anymore anyway.
@MarkIrwin02 Жыл бұрын
@CalgarGTX ya I got lasik and couldn't be happier. They told me that for at least the first week don't rub my eyes. That doing so could cause problems with the flaps. Well that was fine with me as I had already stopped doing that since by rushing your eyes you are thinning out your cornea. Making it harder to see and get treatment for vision problems. Lasik was the best choice I've ever made so far. But at the same time before I got lasik I was wearing contacts around 14 hrs a day every day. If not longer. Glasses caused distored vision while driving so was really unsafe for me to wear glasses if not at home. Got lasik at 40.5 yrs. I personally had no pain or discomfort during or afterwards. Next day I already had 20/20 vision. And prior to it my prescription was 3.75 for both eyes. For seeing far away plus I had astigmatism in both eyes. I get no Starburst though sometimes the brightness of lights at night are brighter now then before. As things are more clear now then before. It's like going from 1080p with glasses to 4k with contacts and 8k after lasik. Much more used to the lights at night now and eyes have adjusted lot for night time since got it. As for prk. I've had some places say if they can't safely do lasik they won't do it as prk risks are too high. But ya as with all things there is a risk involved. To say won't do something for the chance to improve your life because of possible negative outcome. Then why on here. Being on here is a risk and so on. A job is a risk that could end up in legal troubles or something else. Not saying that they apply to your comment but merely adding to it.
@Whitebushido Жыл бұрын
I got LASIK about a year and a half ago. Was absolutely blown away at how effective it was. Biggest downside I had was body dysmorphia from not ever seeing myself without glasses before. I was worried about starbursts but thankfully none encountered.
@owenoreilly_20 Жыл бұрын
i’ve never had lasik or any eye surgery, up until two years ago I thought “starbursts” were normal, apparently it’s relatively common for some people
@Wienerslinky Жыл бұрын
@@owenoreilly_20 pretty sure its another word for astigmatism, which lots of people have. TransPRK should fix it iirc
@phoneyphone Жыл бұрын
@@owenoreilly_20is it a bad thing to have?
@friendlysnoworb6091 Жыл бұрын
@@owenoreilly_20I have starbursts because I have astigmatism, which fucking sucks
@friendlysnoworb6091 Жыл бұрын
@sliky5598 I get fucking compass directions around any bright light, got all the arrows from N,E,S,W down to the fucking NNE/SSW
@vikhaxnz Жыл бұрын
Coming from a licensed eye doctor, this is actually an amazing video for high myopes that are considering laser eye surgery.
@RetiredRhetoricalWarhorse Жыл бұрын
Is it? What I get out of it is "For the love of god, don't!" Which is what the doctor should have been telling him, IMO. I think if it was me, I'd be visiting that guy with a ski mask and a baseball bat.
@arbo3495 Жыл бұрын
You think it's fine for low myopic people instead?
@GodKing804 Жыл бұрын
Myopes is a cool word
@Angel-Pizzaeater Жыл бұрын
@@GodKing804 no, it's not.
@mhrn.1309 Жыл бұрын
''Licensed eye doctor'' isn't even a thing. People love to put labels on their names to sound credible.
@DrewColpurs Жыл бұрын
I got LASIK (and also had a negative experience), but the center has been extremely kind and accommodating and my eyes are about 90%-100% of perfect imo (it kinda depends on the day). When I was experiencing dry eye, they gave me drops that were extra thick, they were almost gooey/slimy. These would only be used at night and did a much better job and handling sleeping dryness. The brand was called "blink geltears" and one of the taglines says "extra long-lasting relief"
@macmcleod1188 Жыл бұрын
I use normal genteal drops. But I live in a humid environment. Might be worse if I lived somewhere that the humidity was under 30%.
@giraffe1219 Жыл бұрын
May I ask when you got Lasik? I got mine about 4-5 years ago, and I had very dry eyes for years but I've noticed as time passes it improves.
@DrewColpurs Жыл бұрын
@@giraffe1219 I got mine in October 2022, so about a year ago! I still get pretty bad dry eyes when I'm tired (late at night or waking up)
@dionicgg7399 Жыл бұрын
As someone looking into laser eye surgery, with an astigmatism, night driving is already rough enough… glad to have watched this, so I know what questions to ask when the time comes.
@ZoxtorPK Жыл бұрын
astigmatism can be easily fixed with glasses.
@imblackmagic1209 Жыл бұрын
@@ZoxtorPK starburst stay even with glasses on... they can be quite annoying tbh, at least i'm luck and I only have a thin diagonal line for bright light sources during the night, glasses off everything is blurry added the starburst, glasses on only the starburst remain
@TrumponSoaksUpRed7 ай бұрын
@@ZoxtorPKThere are even contact lenses to correct astigmatism
@nami1540 Жыл бұрын
As someone who had dry eye problems without surgery, here are some tips: - You can keep your eyes moist, by wearing a moisture trapping sleep mask such as Tranquileyes. They are basically comfortable swimming glasses but the only ones decent on the market. - With some practice, you can apply your eye ointment directly to the eye lid. That way you don't run the risk of getting an infection from something on your finger. I am not sure if your doctor really meant you to apply it with your finger. - Use eyedrops without preservatives. They ruin your eyes over time. You can spot those either because of single use containers or complex multi-use containers (so that they stay hygienic without preservatives).
@DiamondTear Жыл бұрын
I agree with this commenter. It's easy to put eye ointment directly on the lower lid directly from the tube. Even the label says "to avoid contamination, do not touch tip of container to any surface"
@Chronically_ChiII8 ай бұрын
For the rest of my life??
@chrisalvino812 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this video. I got LASIK 9 years ago and am now legally blind. I can't drive or read books or draw anymore. I can barely walk. It's awful. My life is absolutely wrecked because of LASIK. We need more awareness about these negative outcomes
@Grk149 Жыл бұрын
Damn I’m so sorry to hear, that was my biggest fear before pulling the trigger. Was it a degradation that started right after surgery or it took a while to begin?
@monharris28 Жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry that happened to you. I'm sending you so many blessings.
@_PatrickO Жыл бұрын
I got lasik 11 years ago. It was fine. Slightly weak prescription, but eye dryness is no different than they were before the surgery. I rarely have to wear glasses. Did you have lasik where they cut the flap with a laser or did they use the blade tool? The latter has worse outcomes than having the flap cut with a laser. The video does a piss pour job describing lasik because Taran never got lasik. His misconception about prk just being better is rather silly. Lasik from the 90s and early 00s is not the same as modern lasik. It is odd he said the older the tech is, the better, then cites old lasik 90s issues that have nothing to do with more modern lasik. "am now legally blind" explain how lasik made you legally blind.
@unclesam8862 Жыл бұрын
@@_PatrickO we've got Lasik inventor here ready to promote his dangerous Lasik experiments
@_PatrickO Жыл бұрын
@@unclesam8862 The inventor of lasik has nothing to do with lasik done by a laser that is computer controlled. Grow the fuck up.
@user-mt4zr5kp7h Жыл бұрын
I had LASIK in 2008. I remember just before it was my turn for the surgery, there was a woman sitting on the sofa outside of the operating room, for lack of a better term, and she had just had it done so she had very dark glasses on while she sat there waiting for her follow-up tests. You could see that she was just looking around the room seeing what she could see and experiencing it. I asked her what it was like, as I was starting to get nervous, getting closer to the moment that I would go on for my surgery. There was a pause and she said "it was very.... intense." I didn't quite know what to make of that statement. I thought I knew what it meant, but then I wasn't sure. Well I will tell you now, to this day I use the exact same description when someone asks me what it was like. Because there are simply no words more fitting to describe it once you've had the experience. There is some slight pain as their little mechanism slices the flap on your eye, but that felt sort of like a dull ache. Beyond that it was completely painless but you are laying on the table staring up at this light, terrified that you're never going to be able to see again, so your body is tense while you're trying to hold very still. It was indeed, a very INTENSE feeling. But the entire operation from start to finish took less than a minute per eye and only seven or eight minutes after I went into the room, I was back out; myself now the one then sitting on the couch with dark sunglasses on. I did have halos around lights for the first year or so, diminishing over that time but that's about it. Halos aren't really the right word for what I'm looking for.. I didn't have the refraction effects that you describe in your video. For me it was more like , well anyone who's ever looked at the street lights down the road on a foggy night will know. You know that glow that sort of surrounds the light as the light bounces off the water droplets in the fog and you have this pale glow around the street light? That's what it was like for me. That's about the most accurate way I can describe it. Since then I've had excellent vision. For the first couple of months after surgery, I would wake up with very dry eyes in the night much like you describe, where they really hurt to open. Plus I was afraid that my eyelid was sticking to my eyeball and I would find myself afraid to open my eye for fear that it would pull the flap back off my eye. The second night after I had the surgery I even whacked my eye in my sleep, and that hurt so freakin bad! That really frightened me and the next day I went right back to the surgeon to make sure everything was okay. I do get dry eyes more often than I did before the surgery but not as bad as it was the first two or three years after my surgery. I used to have to keep eye drops in my pocket and I would use them several times throughout the day, and often wake up at 2 or 3 in the morning and have to use them again. Today I keep some in my lunch pail, and some in the medicine cabinet. I need them maybe two or three times a week and it's worse when I'm smoking pot as I tend to get dry eyes then anyway. Most people I know that have had LASIK don't suffer from the same issue that I do however. Now, all these years later, I am getting to where I will probably need reading glasses soon as the people at Lasik MD did warn me would happen when I approached 45. But my faraway vision is still really good and I can't say that I regret doing it. One quick aside, your eyes never technically heal after lasik. They are not made of the type of cells that regenerate the way other parts of your body do. Instead, the flap on your eye sort of glues itself back into place. When I heard this, which unfortunately was after my surgery when I read some things online, I was a little unsettled at the idea. But what I have found out is that the amount of force it would take to undo that "gluing" that has occurred, would actually have damaged your eye anyway. So even though the flap is not technically healed like a cut on your hand would heal, it's also not going anywhere. It's on there good.
@monowavy Жыл бұрын
neat! thanks for sharing your experience!
@themanguy2110 Жыл бұрын
thank you for your lengthy and detailed account!
@keimist7398 Жыл бұрын
not reading lol
@sabrinarosario6499 Жыл бұрын
When they separate the cornea now, you don’t feel a thing, provided your doctor uses good and enough numbing drops. I didn’t feel a thing and I had it done 3 weeks ago.
@spookwave4966 Жыл бұрын
I ain’t reading all that. I’m happy for you tho or sorry that happened
@ellafoxoo Жыл бұрын
Gosh, I've had so many people in my life try to push me towards getting this surgery and I just couldn't. Reality is, I like how I look with glasses! I wouldn't change that for the world to be honest. Like yourself, I'm also in need of my vision for my job because I work with colour rendering and photography. I suffered dry eyes consistently for a good 2 years after a severe eye infection in 2015, and it was so frustrating to deal with. Thank you for the information, it's definitely made me feel like I've made the right call
@chadnoneo9769 Жыл бұрын
The main reason I hate my glasses is that I lose some of my field of view, it's still there just unusable. Also the reflections on the edges of the glasses distract me at times too.
@leonro Жыл бұрын
Haha, I am somewhat conflicted in terms of looks because I like the way I look either way, even though I do look quite different with or without glasses. If I needed to choose, I would say that I prefer no glasses if I shaved, but glasses are nice if I haven’t shaved for a while. And because I'm lazy, I'm usually in the latter category. :) Also, I am sure you made the right call. If you want to try the "no glasses" look, you should get contact lenses. It's easier on the wallet and reversible. Even if you simply looked better without glasses, it's not worth the risk when your job is dependent on having a good pair of eyes.
@ellafoxoo Жыл бұрын
@@leonro oh yeah def. I've worn contacts in the past, I'm okay with them? Personally I still like how glasses can do a lot to make your face look rounder. At least with larger sizes 😊
@MyAmazingUsername Жыл бұрын
Laser eye surgery is temporary at best, if you are lucky to avoid complications. You still need glasses again a decade later since eyes naturally get worse with age. So it is literally a totally pointless risk. Lewis from the Yogscast is a perfect example. Got the eye surgery in like 2012 and has glasses again since like 2020. And besides, glasses are adorable on women. You can change out for all kinds of styles. You can change prescription when needed. And you keep your natural vision and zero issues with your eye health. Definitely worth staying natural.
@-1-2-1- Жыл бұрын
Thankyou so much for posting this. You have probably saved many many eyes from this devastating surgery. It must have been very hard emotionally to do. I had SMILE 4 years ago and it has comprehensively destroyed my life. I am unable to work and am now on disability allowance.
@TheTrio3331 Жыл бұрын
I feel validated by this video, I got lasik around 2 years ago and looking online I couldn’t find testimonials that line up with nightly eye drops multiple times through the night, but that is totally my experience too. I had astigmatism so the starbursts remained fairly consistent for me before and after surgery. I do notice a bit more eye fatigue from focusing on something close like a screen for an extended duration, it never used to feel good to focus on something far away, now it feels like I’m literally stretching my eyes.
@zawhernos2541 Жыл бұрын
Did it get better ? ..is it worth all the pain? Just wondering
@TheTrio3331 Жыл бұрын
@@zawhernos2541 My dry eyes definitely have not gotten all the way better yet. I used to need them during the day too, but now it is mostly only at night and when I cut onions. They stick and itch whenever I wake up and I have to use a few drops. It's worth it to me, it's more just discomfort than pain. I tried a goo similar to the one Taran used in the video, but it was super hard for me to apply and all it did was make my eyes water and remove all the goo just as Taran described, but even when I was super sleepy. I just make due with excessive dry eye drops right before bed and a few when I wake up.
@TheTrio3331 Жыл бұрын
@@zawhernos2541 Also, the only real pain I had with recovery was the day of, but I had LASIK. It was weirdly unbearable uncomfortable, but then I passed out from the Vicodin and when I woke up it was just a little itchy. after that it was really mild and absolutely no biggie. I'm super glad I did it, to be clear, but that first day was real rough.
@zawhernos2541 Жыл бұрын
@@TheTrio3331 I've had such a mixed opinion Specially from people (and me) who expected every issue would just disappear by this and I guess it's better to wait to get more clear concept Thanks ♥️
@Who_Does Жыл бұрын
@@zawhernos2541 Was wearing glasses since I was 6 y/o. Had bad astigmatism. Got LASIK 10 years ago, do I regret having LASIK? absolutely NOT! I now have prescription glasses back because of starbursts and I was too young when I had the surgery (was 17, they say your eyes still change shape). I only use them when out at night, but even if I don't, it isn't as bad as what is told in the video. The super dry eyes went on for about 6 months post surgery. I don't use eyedrops now (I probably should). Bottom line is, do it on your mid 20's at least. Do it if you are close to being blind without glasses/lenses, and/or wearing them are very limiting for you. Of course case to case basis. Different eyes, different doctors, but I'd still recommend it.
@honzaklos Жыл бұрын
I had Epi-LASIK (which is a PRK-like procedure, _NOT_ standard LASIK, basically PRK with a different method of removing/treating epithelium) 6,5 years ago. I have EXACTLY the same experience and problems. It doesn't get better... :( I even still experience the 'cursor' effect, I just got used to it, I guess... I don't have such a problem with dry eyes like you do, but sometimes during the night I do wake up with terrible pain in one of my eyes. Not every night, though. Will try Muro 128.
@theboathaaa7654 Жыл бұрын
Apply with a clean qtip, not your grimy-ass, half-washed fingers plz
@Giraffe21_ Жыл бұрын
Both of my eyes were -7 and I was told LASIK was not an option. So instead in December I went the route of getting ICL lens implants which put a lens between your cornea and iris. I had a slight haze for a day or so which was to be expected but after that first day I had 20/20 vision without an complications, no pain or anything afterwards and the only thing I had to do was put in eye drops for three weeks. The only side effect I have that has since diminished to a point I don't even notice it anymore unless I focus on it, is that when there is a bright light source in my field of view I get some sort of halo in my peripheral vision (kind of like lens flare). In the end I'm insanely happy with the result and if I had to choose again I would do it.
@Ramon314 Жыл бұрын
I'm at -12 right now and it is still changing. It would be amazing if I can get 20/20 again. Even with perfect made glasses I am not getting 20/20 right now.
@EGH666 Жыл бұрын
my wife was at -11 or worse i dont remember and still had lasik. that was over 10 years ago and she is still fine.
@projectnemesi5950 Жыл бұрын
How does it impact your ability to change focus?
@Giraffe21_ Жыл бұрын
@@projectnemesi5950 I have no issues with focusing, even when sitting behind my screen for countless hours a day there are no problems.
@projectnemesi5950 Жыл бұрын
@@Giraffe21_ So the muscles in the eye can still find focus
@crimsondragon2921 Жыл бұрын
*26min of talking about the downsides and complications of PRK* "Get PRK over over LASIK. It is soooo much better. I've had a ton of issues but my mom with LASIK has had none but the internet told me it was bad."
@MyMessyMind Жыл бұрын
Seriously wtf was this video even for?
@Pimp_Shrimp Жыл бұрын
Yeah... that confused me.
@-ZH Жыл бұрын
@@MyMessyMind It is to discuss some of the risks and side effects of PKR, which he believes is still less than that of LASIK
@J0ttaD Жыл бұрын
Lmao ikr
@RT-qz5ci Жыл бұрын
Its just information. Do with it what you will. Wheres your video?
@anubajpai9100 Жыл бұрын
Hi Tarun, I stay in Vancouver and went through a similar experience. I now have extreme dry eyes due to lasik, I saw some of the renowned doctors in BC but they either put a punctal plug in or just prescribed some medication and drops. Only recently did I travel to the US and saw a doctor who checked my meibomian glands, took lipiscans and informed me that the dryness is being caused for the extreme level of meibomian gland dysfunction. Please see a doctor in Canada who can do your meibography. I have lost almost all my glands in the right eye and once lost they can’t be regenerated but if you catch the issue in time you can take measure to help the remaining gland stay alive. Do some research about mgd and how it attributes to dry eye disease and take measure to go to the root of it. This dry eye issue is a progressive condition.
@sirflimflam Жыл бұрын
This is my literal terror. I've been wearing glasses since 3rd grade and I'm in my mid 30s now. I've always flirted with laser eye surgery but once it gets messed up, it's a done deal. If I ever do get it done, I'm definitely doing them a year or two apart.
@theendurance Жыл бұрын
it has a 99% success rate. its a really common surgery so of course you'll have many bad stories
@evilgibson Жыл бұрын
I got my PRK surgery around 24 or so after wearing glasses. Let me tell you as someone that wore glasses for that long, the immediate feeling of reaching for your glasses automatically and realizing you don't need them anymore is the best feeling.
@ricardofranco4114 Жыл бұрын
No way will I ever do this surgery. Fuck it. All I need are glasses, and if I want to, I could get contacts. People have been wearing glasses for like forever tried and true. I'm sticking with it.
@mynameisactuallyalvin Жыл бұрын
Wanted to throw in my two cents here. I had -8.5 in both my eyes with mild astigmatism and went into SMILE surgery about 5 months ago. Procedure went great. Can recommend from my experience.
@adrianke77 Жыл бұрын
@@theendurance 1% rate of failure is fine for something fixable, 1% rate of permanent uncorrectable eyesight damage and pain for an optional operation is way too high.
@Edu_RJR Жыл бұрын
I drove my best friend to get LASIK done, I personally never needed glasses and have pretty good eyesight, but I was astounded how he literally left the surgery with better eyesight than I do, even using sunglasses he could read highway signs a couple dozen yards before I could while driving
@developerAKX Жыл бұрын
Has he faced any type of disadvantage
@Edu_RJR Жыл бұрын
@@developerAKX no long term side effects, he did say that in the first weeks it wasn't pleasant, like always having sand on your eyes, but it's been some years now and he's totally fine
@nosferatu5 Жыл бұрын
That was my experience too! Right after surgery i have never seen the world more clearer. Then it gets blurrier after a while and lasts a couple of days and then it clears up and settles. Not as good as the super post surgery vision, but still good.
@musiclabmn Жыл бұрын
I had LASIK back in 2007. Absolutely amazing from a vision perspective, even 16 years later I have perfect vision. Like mentioned frequently from others, while I'm happy I did it and I was sick of wearing glasses and contacts, I do suffer from night-time starbursts around lights and dry eye at night. I was hoping it would get better over the years, but it really hasn't. It doesn't bother me like it did the first couple years.
@rb98769 Жыл бұрын
Similar experience here. I had LASIK some ten years ago. Great results and I don't need glasses to this day. I get starbursts at night and they got a lot better over time, but no issue with dry eyes here. Overall a huge net positive for me personally.
@Story_time_funandnews Жыл бұрын
@@rb98769 what's your age? And what was your eye power before surgery?
@i-Sensei-XII6 ай бұрын
Hey guys tell us about your eye power ? Mine are - 0.75 nd -2.50 , should I consider it ? Bcuz I m fed of wearing glasses every time
@Jupiter-x8f5 ай бұрын
Does it mean starbusts is getting well as time passed?
@musiclabmn5 ай бұрын
@@Jupiter-x8f Mine never really got better, just learned to deal with it
@CorbOnTheCobb Жыл бұрын
After watching this, I feel incredibly lucky that my surgery went so well. For me, surgery was a must. I do martial arts, so contacts are just gonna get knocked out, and glass are an obvious no. This isn't even mentioning how miserable my astigmatism was as someone who has to drive at night on a daily basis. So to see well while I pursue one of my greatest passions, I needed to do surgery, and PRK was my only option because LASIK would be too risky for me. The recovery definitely sucked, but I recovered quicker than expected, I have no dry eye, I have no starbursts, it fixed my astigmatism (I am no longer terrified to drive at night), and I can see 20/20 at the time of writing this (I still have potential for improvement up to 20/15, but I'm content regardless). I would absolutely do it again in a heartbeat. It was 100% worth it for me. From what I've read, statistically, most surgeries are successful (95%). However, it is good to be informed of the risks before undergoing it. There is the 1 in 20 chance you could be one of the cases that would not be deemed successful, and if that isn't a risk you are willing to take, you may want to stick with glasses/contacts. However, I would like to reemphasize how absolutely amazing not having astigmatism or wearing glasses is. It is genuinely life changing how easy so many things became for me. It is ESPECIALLY helpful as someone who rides a motorcycle. Having perfect vision on a motorcycle can NOT be overvalued.
@johnpulawski35 Жыл бұрын
how myopic were you before the surgery?
Жыл бұрын
Why would contacts come off with martial arts? Is your opponent hitting you in the eyes?
@CorbOnTheCobb Жыл бұрын
@@johnpulawski35 The day after, I was hardly able to see more than a few feet in front of me, but it quickly improved. By the end of the first week, the scratch had completely healed (no more weird sleeping goggles!), and I could see clearly up to 30-40 feet (excluding text). I even felt comfortable driving after two weeks. After about three months, I reached the 20/20 mark, and I have made very, very slight improvements since. I improved faster than expected though. Most people might expect a similar pattern, but at a slightly slower pace. Luckily, I'm a college student, and I did all of this over winter break. I didn't have my life too horribly interrupted by the recovery.
@CorbOnTheCobb Жыл бұрын
@ They wouldn't ever do it intentionally, but it is something that does unfortunately happen when your goal is to punch the other person in the face, and there isn't much you can do to avoid it (aside from never getting hit; something I have yet to master unfortunately). If they don't come out, they could also get shifted way out of position to under your eyelid, which isn't much better. I could *see* (haha funny) contacts being great for other sports, but I wouldn't recommend them for martial arts if you strike to the face at all. It's best to just go in without glasses or contacts.
@valdurion6779 Жыл бұрын
what was your astigmatism rated at?
@grahamharris7676 Жыл бұрын
I’m sitting at -10 on both eyes. I was also told PRK was the way to go. When I asked questions about these exact issues I was told to just “trust them”. That was 10 years ago and I’ve always wondered if I should have just had it done. Thanks for posting this and helping with my perceived regret of not going through with it.
@theglowcloud2215 Жыл бұрын
Ah yes, "just trust me, bro", the phrase that should be the tip off that your doctor is a fraud.
@kebab6617 Жыл бұрын
"trust us", "this is normal", "it will get better with time"
@BreadAndGatorade Жыл бұрын
I’m -5 when i had my PRK 6 months ago. The research I read said from around 6.5 it becomes much riskier to get a good result. My recovery is longer than expected. Well my right eye was good after 2 weeks. My left eye is like 90%, a very slight haze or blur only notice if I close right eye. Otherwise I had a very slight worsening of starbursts which I already had before surgery. Dry eye when I wake but just do eye drop and it’s good for the day. I think you made the right choice in not getting it with -10
@SemekiIzuio Жыл бұрын
Reasons why I haven't done it yet as well, im still young i think ill do it when im 40-50 yrs old(?) A point in my lifespan that another 20 yrs id be ok going back to glasses
@BreadAndGatorade Жыл бұрын
@@SemekiIzuio That is the complete opposite and a terrible idea. You want to get it done as soon as your prescripion stabilizes as an adult. Your body does not get better at healing with age, especially something like eye surgery.
@MrElitehunting Жыл бұрын
Hey Taran, I had PRK 12 years ago and still suffer from the same morning dry eye rip your eyelid/eyeball problem that you have. I tried the ointment in the past but it didnt seem to work too well. What does work is taking flaxseed oil (or fish oil) about 3000-4000 mg a day (more than the dosage on the bottle). My eye doctor recommended it several years ago and its the only thing that I notice makes a difference. Apparently, ingesting that much Omega 3 oil will make some of it migrate up to your eyes and help keep them lubricated. You have to take the oil every day to build it up in your system, and it takes a week or 2 to notice the difference- but it definitely helps. The other thing that helps is wearing a sleep mask somewhat tight on my face- that prevents me from opening my eyes accidentally and causing the peel. Instead, when I wake up, I take care to rub my eyes a bit before opening them and make sure they're not stuck to my lids. The mask also helps prevent any airflow in the room from working its way into my lids and drying my eyes more. With these methods, I only get the peel about once a week (if I missed a dose of oil).
@Sureshkumar-mb1xf Жыл бұрын
How is you dry eye now??
@VAneka666 Жыл бұрын
Wore glasses since i was 6, got LASIK 8 years ago, with nearsightedness, right eye was -11, left was -9. In last few years my vision got a bit worse, now it's like 60-70% when i'm really tired, and 80-85% when well rested and not stressed. The one thing that bothers me, is that my eyes are very sensitive to the tiniest particles of dust/makeup/eyelashes.
@Miriam-rs1nl9 ай бұрын
Aren't you sensitive to light?
@Miriam-rs1nl9 ай бұрын
Did you get Mouches Volantes? Is this a vitreous opacity?😊
@moonrazk Жыл бұрын
How incredibly conveniently timed, I was just looking into PRK vs. LASIK [which is probably why youtube recommended me this video]. My nearsightedness isn't as bad as your was, but it's still really bad and it annoys and worries me a lot how dependent I am on my glasses, and since I don't need perfect eyes for my profession (IT) I'm still going for it, but you definitely helped me decide to go for PRK, so thank you for the video. Edit: It's been a week since I had my PRK done. The first 24 hours were hell, couldn't open my eyes even to just put in the 3 different eyedrops I had to use without taking the pain meds. Light sensitivity went down gradually and 3-4 days after the surgery I could already stay without sunglasses while inside. My night vision is awful right now, lots of bloom around lights, I'm not seeing the starbursts like in Taran's images, but instead a smooth halo, it's quite annoying if I'm trying to use my phone while I'm in bed 'cause I'd have it at minimal brightness and with a very strong orange tint, but if I do that now I can't see anything, it's all just a blurry, orange mess. Haven't had dry eyes at all, one time, one or two days after the surgery I had a slight bit of pain when opening my eyes when waking up, but I think it was just because I opened them too fast. Got another appointment with my doctor next Monday, I might keep updating this comment, but probably only when it's a month after surgery now.
@anetteviil3630 Жыл бұрын
Working on computer requires good near vision. If your near vision at the moment is good, it might not be so after refractive surgery.
@Leoappeared Жыл бұрын
its a wierd recommendation if the "better" procedure chosen turn out suboptimal. The risks of lasik regarding the flap are actually quite minor and du to the smaller surgery maybe the chance of side effects as taran describes here would have been lower with lasik or smile. In europe prk is only considered in cases where lasik is not possible due to less side effects and better healing.
@baugetti7295 Жыл бұрын
Plz update
@GrueTurtle Жыл бұрын
Any improvement?
@KirkirPL Жыл бұрын
Lol, you have listened to a youtube tech guy who blows up extremely rare side effects of lasik to a ridiculous proportion. And you went for an inferior procedure which complications (various visual disturbances) are typical and you and author both got them.
@danedwards_ee Жыл бұрын
I had SMILE (kinda like LASIK, but no flap.) surgery early 2021, one of the best things I ever did. Even though my vision was -1.0, I hated not needing glasses with everyday life, but having to use them sometimes like movie and driving. I had the star vision at night for a few months, but now my vision is great. So happy I did it. Shame it didn't work out for you.
@TaranVH Жыл бұрын
That's great that it worked out for you! I've heard some reeeeeally bad stuff about SMILE going wrong
@danedwards_ee Жыл бұрын
@@TaranVH yeah, from what I've understood, SMILE _really_ is mostly dependent on the surgeon and their experience. Complications will arise with the same risks of LASIK, so moving during surgery etc. IIRC if the surgery went sideways, they would resort to doing LASIK instead. But it's really depends on the person, doctor and method. My surgeon was half surprised how well my surgery went (correction wise), especially as it was such a small correction. Didn't even need to go for my 6mo checkup as 1mo was fine.
@aToxicPotato338 Жыл бұрын
@@TaranVH I was one of the test patients for SMILE when it was getting approved in the U.S. I had to have it redone with LASIK as it did not take. Fortunately it did not cost me anything. All good now except my night vision is SO good now. But also way more sensitive to on coming headlights like in your thumbnail. One of my coworkers had PRK and was COMPLETELY blind after for several weeks. They did know if her vision would come back or not. She is fine now but it was really scary at the time. Long story short they all have risks.
@Trespas Жыл бұрын
@@TaranVH I had my eyes fixed with SMILE too in 2021, but had to delay the operation due to it going extremely wrong for the person having it done right before me. The machine broke in such a way that the doc hadn't seen "anything like this in 20 years" (which I suspect was to make me feel at ease). The persons eye that was being operated on was quite messed up. As I live in a relatively small place, I heard they kinda managed to fix the eyer after a year of healing/waiting, but had to use some other method instead of smile. Still glad I took a calculated risk and went through with it, was quite afraid of the side effects in dark (I drive a lot during nights), but luckily had no issues. Went in hoping to get a solid 7-15 years without glasses and after that maybe get lasik or lens replacement surgery if needed due to age (I was told SMILE can only be done once, and lasik can be done to the same eye after a 6 months if needed).
@TaranVH Жыл бұрын
@@Trespas aaaaghg haha that would have scared me off permanently!!
@Oktokolo Жыл бұрын
I had PRK to correct my shortsightedness and light astigmatism a decade ago. It was like in a science fiction. I just lay down get some eye drops and then the laser does its thing. No cutting of flaps and no fixation of the eye - the laser reacts fast enough that you can just stare at it and it does it's thing. Was a feeling like being in that iconic scene of Total Recall... After the procedure, i got protective contact lenses and two kinds of drops to use. For a week or so my eyes where burning like on fire. It was the most painful experience of my life. My eyes where also extremely sensitive to bright light. Looking outside the window into daylight hurt. But as the eyes healed, the burning sensation disappeared and the sensitivity toned down a lot. It is only a decade that i didn't need glasses or contacts now but it definitely was totally worth it. That 4k bucks where the best investment i ever did and i am willing to repeat it even enduring the same pain again when my aging eyes at some point in the future need correction again. My eyes are slightly more dry than before (always had occasional dryness issues but it's not so bad that i would need drops). I also have some starbursts at night now (orders of magnitude less than you though) - but i actually sortof like them. But my night vision is now actually slightly better than before (maybe just because glasses have always some specks of dust on them which eat and diffract some light). TLDR: PRK changed my life for the better.
@PlanetZhooZhoo Жыл бұрын
Excellent description! I had free treatment as part of the development programme for PRK here in the UK. It was already established in the US and Russia but new here. What I didn't know then was that I have a genetic connective tissue disorder called Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome hypermobility type and the epithelium never pegged back properly, just like yours. So I know that excruciating pain of ripping your eyes open in the morning. I already had dry eye as they'd stream if I went outside in a breeze, but the PRK made it worse. I always had light sensitivity too but the glasses just reduced it. The benefits lasted me 7 years and then my myopia became worse and I had to wear glasses again (until cataract surgery). Now it's just Hyloforte drops, sunglasses, and avoiding night driving as much as possible because of blinding starbursts (cataracts and astigmatism made it worse). Good luck with managing your life around it too.
@Barb7664 ай бұрын
What is your age now and when did u get the surgery
@jakedaynesLTT Жыл бұрын
First view, we miss you at LMG buddy!
@ShadowRubberDuck Жыл бұрын
I thought you were Linus’s son for one second
@wobblysauce Жыл бұрын
Almost
@LtdJorge Жыл бұрын
@@ShadowRubberDuckthis is the other Jake
@Katiethekitten Жыл бұрын
Damn
@johnsalchichon3605 Жыл бұрын
Light machine gun?
@sv9818 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video! I used to have very high myopia and decided to have Lasik 20 years ago, results were okay initially but not great; specially if considering that before surgery, I had 20/20 vision when wearing contacts or glasses, but after surgery I never achieved that quality of vision ever again). Things started going "south" about 7 years ago... long story short, my vision is terrible now. I have a hard time reading, driving at night is not possible anymore and my eyes have become drier and drier (I now need some expensive eye drops 4 times a day). I would not recommend Lasik to any friend or family member; severe risks do exist and if you are unlucky, you may end-up with an incurable condition that will impar you... for the rest of your life. This video also doesn't mention one of the worst potential side effects: terrible chronic eye pain...
@y-yyy Жыл бұрын
oh wow... thank you so much for your comment. it's rare to hear from people who are 15+ years in.
@metaleggman18 Жыл бұрын
Glad to know controlling eye focus is a thing. I got used to doing it because of those auto stereogram books (magic eye) at the doctors office, so I can do it on command pretty easily. I LOVED the 3DS because of that. I never had a problem with the 3D, especially on the newer version.
@TaranVH Жыл бұрын
Magic eyes are so easy for me!
@ge2719 Жыл бұрын
stereograms are viewed by controlling the convergence of both your eyes though, controlling the focus of each eye isnt necessary to see them. but i suppose while trying to see the images you could have been training your ability to focus each eye too.
@leonro Жыл бұрын
I also loved the 3DS's 3D screen! I could never understand the complaints about the 3D effect not working, lol. Even on that low resolution display, the 3D game worlds just felt somehow magical.
@rdizzy1 Жыл бұрын
I never had issues seeing the 3d on the 3ds, but I can NEVER see magic eye pictures, never, no matter what I do.
@jibcot8541 Жыл бұрын
@@ge2719 I have never really thought about it before, but just tested it and controlling the convergence of my eyes does seem to automatically adjust the focal distance at the same time.
@Lifeszu Жыл бұрын
the problem here is you need to kill any pathogens before any surgery. Before any surgery I learn that 10 ozone pass is necessary. Hope you will heal and get your vision back
@jtwoodhams Жыл бұрын
Taran: As a refractive surgeon with over 30 years experience, I can tell you that you definitely should NOT have had laser vision surgery (whether PRK or LASIK or SMILE). You don't say what your prescription was in diopters (your glasses Rx) but it was obviously quite high or whoever evaluated you would have recommended LASIK, not PRK. [My own upper limit is about -6 Diopters.] In my experience, there is little if any difference in terms of possible side-effects and complications between the two, especially in terms of optical distortions. Refractive clinics that encounter a patient unsuitable for LASIK often will tell you "but you can have PRK safely." I do not believe this is true and you are a good example of why. The higher the degree of myopia being treated, the more aberrations there will be -it is not a matter of being perfectly safe up to a certain level, then jump to PRK. The weird and disabling optical issues you describe are a function of your high Rx, not the procedure itself. The higher a person's degree of myopia (near- or short-sightedness), the more corneal aberrations there will be. These are what cause the distorted images you describe with your excellent graphics. There are other options your doctor should have educated you about. I am deeply sorry you have had this outcome, but please realize poor patient selection , not the procedure per se, is the reason.
@yumpie100 Жыл бұрын
so he would have gotten better outcome if he’s done Lasik?
@jean-pierre9698 Жыл бұрын
Nooo don't burst his bubble. I am sure him being one of the few people that got the bad outcome is classified enough to be able to give his intitled opinion
@sagarshrestha5800 Жыл бұрын
Why the lines are cut
@sk9c00 Жыл бұрын
I mean given his line of work and habits, maybe they should have measured his pupil size at different light levels, a subjective dilated pupil tolerance test, and potentially offer ICL as an alternative...
@LiquidShivaz Жыл бұрын
Almost 20 years ago I had lasik. It was the worse experience and I’ve a lot of issues, starbursts being a minor one of them. I’m happy I only had one eye done
@SiMeGamer Жыл бұрын
I personally had an EBK surgery and it was honestly a fantastic experience (it's the newest method and it was done on me by one of the doctors who invented the method). It's like a much better version of PRK with less to no side effects. Less people can get it because there are certain cases that simply cannot have it done (they do checkups prior of course). It works almost immediately but as the healing process goes, for 1-3 days you require someone to take care of you since it's so agonizing and you can basically not function (sleeping is great to reduce the time you are in pain). Then for a few extra days you can put the eye drops yourself and the pain is extremely lessened. Overall it takes about a week to heal and another week to get used to your new eyesight or so. I do see a tiny bit worse in low light and I do get a tiny bit of the star burst effect (far lesser than the video shows). I personally do recommend going to a doctor and seeing what they say on the matter. No wearing glasses is fantastic and I personally didn't require any extra routine care two weeks post surgery. EBK is objectively superior to PRK but it is not available everywhere (I did my surgery in 2017, close to when it was invented). Or leave your glasses on if you prefer. It's not that big of a deal and it's expensive to do the procedure (no extra payments beyond the surgery though which is nice). I hope this comment was helpful to someone :] EDIT: EBK can also be performed many times. So if something goes wrong or after 20-30 years you require a new operation, you can just do it again no problem.
@Enderplays12 Жыл бұрын
In which country did you perform the surgery, if you don't mind sharing? Was curious if it's available in Europe.
@nabieladrian Жыл бұрын
First time I'm hearing EBK. Great to hear but again, we'll always be waiting for the "next improvement"...
@SiMeGamer Жыл бұрын
@@Enderplays12 I personally did it in Israel. I don't know where else it is available but I'd assume there are places in North America and Europe that provide that service.
@panameadeplm Жыл бұрын
I've had astigmatism my entire life and I just figured it's how eyes worked for everyone. I have visual snow as well, and I was surprised to learn that that isn't normal either. It was shocking to see the world without startbursts when I got my first pair of glasses in my late 20s. Unfortunately, as a 16-hour-a-day computer user, I know they're going to come back. Astigmatism comes with the territory, it is what it is. Not to say that yours wasn't caused by the surgery, the rather sudden onset seems to suggest as much, but maybe thinking of it as "certified nerd vision" could make you feel ...better? about it? Worst case scenario, you can just don the glass once again. At least in my case(which looks pretty much identical to the images you made), the glasses make them go away completely, one hundred percent. Since astigmatism is caused by a physical deformation of the eyeball, the lenses can be similarly deformed to refract light in that same manner. It's very effective, aside from the fact that the eye will likely continue to deform as you age, requiring a new prescription every now and then. Just a thought: It's very easy to irritate your eyes. Constantly jamming your fingers in your eyes to apply eyedrops and creams and whatnot adds a lot of bacteria to that area which can cause inflammation, which is difficult to track chronologically. The infection could be introduced to the tissue today and you'd only feel its effects in two days time, which could then last for several days, etc. You'd be surprised how ineffective washing your hands for anything under 5-10 minutes without proper technique can be when it comes to actually removing bacteria and debris from them. You might be stuck in a vicious cycle of irritating your eyes every time you try to treat the symptom of irritation. Washing your eyes an inordinate amount can also have that effect. You could try prescribing yourself some NSAIDs for like a couple weeks while making sure to never touch your eyes under any circumstance to see if anything changes. Again, just a thought, this is not financial advice.
@TaranVH Жыл бұрын
HMMM interesting, you may be right that I should not be jamming my fingers into my eyes every night. Even though that's how the doctor showed me to do it. I'll see if there's another way to apply to Muro 128
@panameadeplm Жыл бұрын
@@TaranVH You know what they say. When you're in the hammer business, a lot of nails, et cetera. All I know is that acne creams never worked for me. Then, when I got glasses, touching my face became a liability so I stopped doing it, now I only get acne on my chin.
@rkan2 Жыл бұрын
Some type of gloves would probably work for applying... But I am not sure which ones because there are so many and they all have different kind of properties. Like the stuff getting stuck on the glove, bu not the eye. I think some set of reusable gloves would work but you'd wash them with alcohol/soapy water before using everytime.
@Yo_Ima_Goat Жыл бұрын
You can get glasses that correct the starbursts? I haven't had any glasses that fixed them.
@LeafarR1657 Жыл бұрын
I was prescribed for astigmatism glasses but I don't feel they help a lot with the star bursts. I'll double check them with another optometrist to see if I can make this annoyance go away. Thanks for sharing!
@michelleisabel Жыл бұрын
I had the exact same experience but I had a retreatment which made the starbursts even worse. Please DO NOT get a retreatment! I cannot state this enough. I could go on forever but really you covered it all. My first surgery was PRK, with lasik retreatment. Night driving is pretty much off the table for me aside from around my city. Nothing long distance.
@janhetjoch11 ай бұрын
You need eyesight driving in your city just as much as long distance. You can hit a kid near where you live as well. If you can't drive long distance you can't drive locally. Most accidents happen near your home anyway.
@Bertrand14611 ай бұрын
@@janhetjoch It can't be worse than your old parents...
@paulcathcart7896 Жыл бұрын
For a different purpose I’ve had a different kind of laser surger to remove abnormal blood vessels (diabetes complications) and the starburst vision caused by my eyes being slow to dilate takes me a month or so to settle after surgery. I hope it all comes together for you.
@pnargurcan3001Ай бұрын
Whats the name of tge surgery? I have the same problem
Ah damn! I had TransPRK so it's a bit different, in Amsterdam. No issues, no pain, healed quickly etc.. I was like the perfect example of how everyone wants it to go. Perfect eye sight even after 5 years now. Much strength to you! :( I would be devastated if I had your journey to endure.
@TedTheAtheist Жыл бұрын
How old are you when you did it? I'm almost 50 and I'm wondering if I should do something.
@Kubulek17 Жыл бұрын
@@ShibaTheKnight wrong country lol
@KoniTheChiwa Жыл бұрын
@@ShibaTheKnight What
@danielch6662 Жыл бұрын
@@TedTheAtheist Almost definitely not. If you're 50, you already have presbyopia. IMO, in our modern world, moderate to strong myopia is much less irritating than hypermetropia. Unless your myopia is so bad like -1000 and above, then you might want to reduce it. Plus, as we age, the likelihood of getting cataracts increases. If you needed IOL, or just decided to get one because of the presbyopia, the probability of adverse outcomes increases if the patient previously had LASIK or PRK. You can't just go cutting into the eye over and over and over. Frequently, IOL surgeries are followed by "touchups".
@BrunaTavaresbnu Жыл бұрын
Same here. I had PRK in Brazil 5 years ago, and it was the best thing in my life. Never regretted.
@Faber_gs Жыл бұрын
Awesome video Taran! When I got my surgery, my doctor said I could do either LASIK or PRK, I really wanted LASIK at first but after a lot of research and feedback from friends, I went with PRK. I was super scared during the surgery due to having stuff being put in my eye even though I haven’t felt anything, but everything went well. I did have starbursts that disappeared after the first few months, it was way worse on my weak eye (left). Years later after my surgery the only two side effects were a little bit more sensitivity to bright light that can cause me headaches sometimes and dry eyes (but nothing compared to what you mentioned in the video, I use eyedrops every couple days). Thank you for sharing the experience!
@MiljanBojovic Жыл бұрын
I had PRK in 2020 and I never had issues. I have to say cornea was thick enough. Also the doctor was VERY clear about the whole procedure. He said. I will do the surgery in less than 10 minutes total, including the drops. I'm not implying anything about what you did but he insisted to say that many people have issues because they don't follow strict instructions like using the drops after surgery, wearing sunglasses and trying not to look into light sources. I had Starbursts with like thousands of little spikes but only for a couple of weeks. I did use the drops a lot and went to sleep early to heal (something people don't realize how importat it is to have a regular sleep schedule). A colleage of mine also told me the same has been told him about hair transaplant. People would complain how their hair did not restore after surgery but ended up being because people stopped taking Minoxidil and Finasteride for the peroiod of time they asked them to do so. My colleague did everything with precision and he's totally ok without issues. Same goes for me. I had 16/10 on both eyes and I still today can see so far away. I have to say that I am aware that the Laser used for my PRK surgery is very recent, so that probably played an important part. So finally I can say. No surgery is perfect and every person can have a different erffect. This effect can be amplified by not following the given prescription and procedure. Some people might have to follow it precisely and some might not because we're all different. But even if the first week was annoying more than painful, I would do the PRK any day. It changed my life by a lot. I don't even think I'm appreciating it enough.
@SmokeyWire56 Жыл бұрын
I'm mildly near-sighted. I was at -1.75 in both eyes. I started wearing contacts about 15 years ago I'm 30 years old. I found that if you choose a flatter base curve for your contacts your vision can improve over time. I'm now at -0.75 and some days in the morning especially I don't need contacts. The flatter base curve for most people means the contact will slide off your eye easily, but the upside is the shape is slowly polishing the eye in the right direction.
@LeBeautiful Жыл бұрын
@@TheDimsml damn wtf? This is so interesting
@Mister_Rooster Жыл бұрын
@@TheDimsml interesting any useful sites to use to research or videos on KZbin?
@damac5136 Жыл бұрын
Wow, I never heard of that.
@kirbysamalikespie Жыл бұрын
@@TheDimsml wearing them as a kid may stop the vision from getting worse, but wearing glasses or soft contacts might do the same thing. The main point being that if you can't see well, you squint. When you squint for long periods of time, you physically squeeze and deform the eyeball, which worsens the problem (myopia can be caused by an eyeball that is slightly elongated). Get some sort of refractive correction (glasses, contacts, ortho-K) and you remove one component (eye strain) that could potentially worsen the problem. Incidentally, there's some research that suggests exposure to bright sunlight (e.g. spending time outdoors, NOT staring at the sun or a lamp) reduces the risk of developing myopia as a child
@TaxingIsThieving Жыл бұрын
?
@mrsubrange Жыл бұрын
I got SMILE surgery. You didnt talk about that as an option, but it could perhaps also have helped you. Smile is better than lasik in terms of avoiding the flap you also talk about. I cannot stop thinking about if the dry eye problems are caused by prk - but I also got more dry eyes, after smile surgery. However, it's never a problem when I'm outside - it is a minor problem at night at home and when working in front of the computer and after I wake up. But I never wake up, because my eyes are dry and hurts. I use the eye drops in the mornings or evenings - luckily not during the day. Thanks a lot for being so honest and tell about the risks, to inform people about this decision! And I hope your eyes will still heal even more so you eventually hopefully can get rid if those eye drops and pain from dry eyes!
@LoisoPondohva Жыл бұрын
All laser eye surgeries have a very high chance of causing dry eye syndrome. Responsible doctors even specifically caution people who already have it against having laser surgery, because if you already have dry eyes, it can get VERY bad.
@mattcowdisease1346 Жыл бұрын
I got eye surgery 3 years ago. I would get it again in a heart beat. The only time my vision gets the light effect is when I have been up for 14 hours straight and my eyes are just tired. A good night sleep fixes it up every time.
@crispyram2 Жыл бұрын
This sounds like the equivalent of turning off then turning on a comptuer when you're facing a bug
@BGFutureBG Жыл бұрын
what kind of eye surgery?
@danfg7215 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I got starbursts after LASIK, but either they went away or my brain adapted to it in such a way that I don't see or notice them anymore. It's a minor issue for me, having almost perfect vision without glasses was way worth any problems.
@raven4k998 Жыл бұрын
and this is why lasik is not perfect
@danfg7215 Жыл бұрын
@@raven4k998 sucks not having perfect eyesight, but it's near perfect and I'd do it again in a heartbeat.
@Story_time_funandnews Жыл бұрын
What's your age and eye power before surgery?
@danfg7215 Жыл бұрын
@@Story_time_funandnews I was around 30 (46 now), 5 and 4.5 degrees I think
@brucewayne29569 ай бұрын
How long it took for the starburst disappear?
@Mournful3ch0 Жыл бұрын
Hey Taran, I had roughly 20/700 vision and went the LASIK route, because my dad had great success with it about 20 years ago. I thought I was alone in the starburst phenomenon, as the surgeon said it should be fully gone at six months which has come and gone. I think the worst part of LASIK was smelling my own burning eye flesh. Other than that, not too bad, and was able to drive the next day!
@StefanBacon Жыл бұрын
Taran you have long been a favorite. Sorry to hear you're having ongoing issues, and thank you for telling your story. This is really startling, and it's good to know that my instinct to avoid eye surgery unless absolutely completely unavoidable was correct. It's not good to hear that you're going through this, but you get my point. As a trucker and heavy equipment operator, I could never take the chance, unless my eyes get career endingly bad.
@AfectadosCirugiaRefractiva Жыл бұрын
This is absolutely correct. Eyes are delicate and precious that you should only get surgery when its unavoidable and strictly medically necessary. Eye surgeons know this and they would never get LASIK or PRK, which are completely elective surgeries. Yet most of them offer LASIK/PRK like used car salesmen to their clients/patients.
@romevang Жыл бұрын
I used to suffer from oil over production which then became chronic dry eye, due to a set of different circumstances. I used to wake up with dry eyes every morning, used eye creams to keep my eyes moisturized while I slept, and it still didn't help. I couldn't see for the first few minutes when I would wake up in the morning. Went to various eye doctors but it wasn't until I saw an eye surgeon when she made the single best suggestion for my dry eye: extremely warm almost searing hot compresses. I used a really hot towel that was soaked in hot water (straight from the faucet, I just kept the water running on hot only), dabbed it over my eye lids for no more than a couple seconds at a time (as to not hurt myself, as much as I could stand). Resoaked the towel and repeated the compress for 10-15 minutes sessions, I would get used to the heat so I could perform the compress for up to 4-8 seconds. First week I did this 3-4 times per day, two times per day on the 2nd week, and then after 2 months I stopped all together. I started notice results after 2-3 weeks; my eyes stopped being so dry during the day and at night, I'd start getting dry eye by 3-4 am... but it wasn't a big deal, that was always my sign to go to bed anyway. I could still go to bed without eye drops or oils and wake up with nothing more than some eye crust that I could easily rinse away after a shower or face rinse over the sink. I could just wake up and see normally. From what I understand, your tear ducts? that allow for the equilibrium mix of water and oil that naturally occurs to lubricate your eye maybe plugged/semi-plugged. The hot compresses in theory should dissolve/soften any material blockage in those ducts. I also used that same brand of eye drops in your video (the green bottle), I suspect the oils in those drops were plugging up my tear ducts because I used to use them frequently (10-20 applications per day), and I don't think they're designed for that. My dry eyes were also causing those starbursts that you talked about. You can validate whether the starbursts come from dry eye by applying eye drops and immediately opening your eyes after and looking at light sources that cause starbursts. If the starbursts are reduced or eliminated, it's your dry eye that's the problem. Not the eyes themselves. Our situations are different, not even sure you'll read this, but I hope that it helps if you do. Not having to worry about dry eye anymore, is a huge blessing. Feels great to not have to do eye care every night. Wish you the best.
@_-_-__-_-_5428 Жыл бұрын
warm compresses are amazing for dry eye, as you said that's exactly how it works. could look into higher strength dry eye drops such as celluvisc 1% used every 4 hrs
@BaumSquad Жыл бұрын
Interesting. Makes me wonder if accutane use is correlated to dry eye issues with lasik/prk. Accutane works to treat acne by essentially causing the body to produce less oil. Perhaps it also affects tear production but not in a way that is as noticeable without a reason to need extra tears. Just for more anectdata. I used accutane as teen in the 90s (dermatologist father so we were somewhat guinea pigs when the stuff came out). I had LASIK in 2005 and went from -5.5 with slight astigmatism. I recall some dry eyes in the first year and my doc over corrected on purpose so that the healing would settle into a good result. It was great ever since and never while I had some starbursts at night, they actually were less than the starbursts I had with regular glasses. Corrective lenses cause starbursts as well but I guess it feels less strange since it’s part of the expectation with wearing glasses and they tend to be sharper starbursts rather than the blurry smudgy starbursts caused by, in my cause, my dialated pupil being larger than the circle cut in the lasik procedure so until it fully healed it would cause that. Anyway dry eyes were not an issue after the first 6 months or so. But what an interesting correlation potential with accutane.
@kelownatechkid Жыл бұрын
This is incredibly useful advice. I get bouts of dry and itchy eyes and this is the only solution that works!
@romevang Жыл бұрын
@@_-_-__-_-_5428 I've tried a few variations of drops but I always defaulted to a warm compress. As a result, I've had to do fewer warm compresses over time. To the point where I hardly do them at all.
@romevang Жыл бұрын
@@BaumSquad I also used acutane in the 90s for acne. I had a severe reaction, I lost the skin to both of my palms; once the reaction was connected to accutane i was immediately pulled off of it. Till this day I still suffer from the effects of accutane. Dry hands (aveeno eczema cream reduces this to an inconvenience) and dry lips. My dry eye issues were mostly resolved after just a couple months of hot compresses but I do wonder what other lasting effects accutane has had on my body.
@nickelandimed Жыл бұрын
Every few years I go through this cycle of wondering about getting laser eye surgery and ultimately feeling like a total coward for never going through with it. I sincerely hope things get better for you but am also grateful your video exists.
@ideallyjekyl5200 Жыл бұрын
RELEX SMLE procedure was awesome for me. It's as good as it gets 👍better than LASIK for sure
@cringeginge7663 Жыл бұрын
This is an edge case
@y-yyy Жыл бұрын
@@cringeginge7663the problem is, if you end up being the edge case, it really doesn't make you feel much better knowing that most other people are fine.
@tubeyou6794 Жыл бұрын
imagine being a visual artist and doing this
@NoName-ik2du Жыл бұрын
Don't sweat it. I did the same thing throughout my 20s before finally getting LASIK at 29. Three years later, and I still regret that decision every day. The "safety" of the surgery is way oversold by surgery centers. Look up the FDA statistics from last year for more accurate information. 1 in 6 people end up with permanent dry eye problems. Those are crap odds when it comes to your eyes, and that's only one of the things that can go wrong.
@spacegeeking Жыл бұрын
For me, laser eye surgery is one of the best things I've ever done. I had similar symptoms for the first two months, which is expected. Afterwards, my eyesight has been 20/20 since. I cannot state the importance of finding out which machine is being used to do the surgery, since the machines are quite expensive and might be on the old side, especially in western countries. I've done LASIK, btw.
@tilburg8683 Жыл бұрын
But how do u find out what they use and if it's good?
@spacegeeking Жыл бұрын
@@tilburg8683 I asked and then googled. Even though I'm no expert, it was easy to find out that the machine used only went in production a few years ago, and you can read the specs. For example, in the video they speak of each eye taking under a minute. In my case, each eye took under 5 seconds (excluding opening the flap). Also, older machines require you to stay perfectly still during the procedure, as where I was allowed to move my pupils.
@Mr_Glock19 Жыл бұрын
I got LASIK done last year to the month and to me, its 100% worth it. I was "legally blind" previously and could only read the big E on the eye tests. After surgery I immediately was testing at 20/15 better than perfect vision. Yeah, I get some starbursts at night but their not bad at all and I had them previously so no real difference there for me. I havent experienced that cursor phenomenon he mentioned but the words on my computer screen look ever so slightly blurry but before the surgery I couldn't read smaller print like these comments at all without leaning towards the monitor to look closer so still a massive improvement in my case and feels almost knit-picky compared to the plus sides, I can still sit back and read at normal pace just fine which I couldnt of done at all before. No near sightedness or far sightedness as of yet, I can see perfect close up and far away. And yes my eyes occasionally get a little dry at night but only at night and only when I stay up on my PC really late so thats pretty much normal and nothing I deal with during the day at all. So all in all I havent really experienced anything out of the ordinary or "bad" and in my case coming from being legally blind and relying on contacts to see, its a massive improvement. Especially if you wear contacts because not having to buy those repeatedly will make up the cost of your LASIK surgery eventually and after so many years will actually end up saving you money. I financed the LASIK surgery at 0% APR through care credit and made monthly payments about the same as my contacts cost for a 3 month supply so theoretically it will pay for itself in 3-4 years for me atleast. And honestly that surgery was so quick and painless and the recovery was so lightning fast I was astounded. I laid on a table for what felt like maybe 5min max and as soon as I sat up I immediately could tell my vision was fixed. It was obviously blurry but it was the kind of blurry like I had my contacts in but my eyes got wet. But I didnt have my contacts in. So I just immediately knew it was a success. By time I got home, took a nap, and woke up, I was greeted with perfect vision and 0 discomfort. Was amazing. So all in all if your legally blind, 10/10 would recommend. If your not legally blind and still can see 'okay', it probably isnt worth the risk of any side effects some people report. Thankfully my experience has been pleasant but even if I had to deal with afew side effects, in my case, I'd probably still find it worth it. Being legally blind was no fun. Without my contacts in I felt almost disconnected from the world not being able to see it correctly. Even feels weird talking to people when you cant see them fully in detail to make eye contact. It wouldve been worth side effects to change that. It was also just such a big risk to have the potential of something getting in my eyes and having to take my contacts out when I wasnt home to replace them, I wouldn't of been able to drive myself home and been legally blind for the duration of wherever I was at and immediately would kill any fun that was being had.
@jaciraguedes5691 Жыл бұрын
i am like that too and i really want to get it done, bit a bit shared
@mathewvanostin7118 Жыл бұрын
Bro can you add 5 more pages. Not detailed enough
@rubyy.7374 Жыл бұрын
You should really break up your paragraphs, bro.
@johnhonker437 Жыл бұрын
100%. I did it in 2011, and I would do it again without hesitation. My night vision was so bad that even with glasses it was a scary proposition to drive at night... Now, I take it for granted that I can see.
@shhinysilver1720 Жыл бұрын
I’m glad that went well for you! For me personally, I don’t think it is worth the risk. I have between 20:40 and 20:60 vision, so not horrible, and I personally like wearing glasses. Also, the thought of having your eye cut into, creating a flap that could come undone from simply rubbing your eye sounds absolutely terrifying.
@Andionschannel Жыл бұрын
The images showing your starburst vision are amazing! Great idea
@minagica Жыл бұрын
I got evaluated for LASIK and I was a borderline candidate, with a thinnish cornea and already dryish eyes. Having to put drops into my eyes three times a day would have defeaty the purpose of being able to wear makeup, so I just got frameless glasses instead
@furkaneyigun9040 Жыл бұрын
I decided to get surgery a week ago. My eye doctor told me that I was available for the LASIK, and he called me the next day for the last examination. When we went with my father, we overheard terrible side effects while we were waiting for the examination. 2 patients who had the surgery complained about irregular astigmatism for 2 months. After examination, we told the doctor that we were worried about side effects and patient compliments. I am still researching surgery techniques and patient comments. Thanks for the video!
@calebstewart6375 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad you were still able to be saved.
@furkaneyigun9040 Жыл бұрын
@@calebstewart6375 thanks!
@SocialistSadako Жыл бұрын
there have been people who committed suicide because of unbearable chronic pain after lasik. I wouldn't get it unless your vision is impaired to the point where glasses can't help
@mynameissang Жыл бұрын
While I was in the Army, I tried to get into its free laser eye surgery program, but kept getting denied because my vision never stabilized. I definitely was not aware of these kinds of side effects, so now I'm actually glad I never got it. Contacts are fine, considering the side effects of the alternative.
@Ramon314 Жыл бұрын
Keep in mind that most people do have positive outcomes. That some people get bad side-effects doesn't mean you will.
@diogenesoliveira6473 Жыл бұрын
@@Ramon314 5% with complications is too high of a percentage for me, though. They always sell like it's this perfect thing...
@Ramon314 Жыл бұрын
@@diogenesoliveira6473 for lots of people even the complications are better than what they had before.
@leonardwei3914 Жыл бұрын
I got LASEK when I was in the Army around 2007. For me, there was the initial period of dryness and a little pain (not too much, barely took the Percocet they prescribed to me). Focusing was a challenge for the first year, and I have issues still with starbursts at night. But my myopia was quite bad prior, so being able to see at day with a slight tradeoff for nights was relatively worth it, although using red dot sights can be a challenge. Interestingly enough, I had a buddy who also went through the same program and was back to using glasses a few years later.
@virgilthemob1242 Жыл бұрын
Eye surgery legitimately feels like a lottery, ngl. My grandmother got a pretty basic cataract surgery one eye at a time to have a back-up in case things went wrong and despite a rather difficult healing period of roughly 2 months, the end result was great. When my father did a more advanced version of the procedure, with a foldable lens that was supposed to correct all of his eyesight issues, a laser alignment software and all the bells and whistles for which he spent 4 times as much, he did both eyes in successive days. It's been more than a year and his eyesight is still awful and to top it all off, now he's got a crescent shaped black area at the top of his field of view. It doesn't matter how fancy a clinic you visit or how much you spend, it really is just the luck of the draw.
@psgamer-il2pt9 ай бұрын
All surgeries are a lottery
@TrumponSoaksUpRed7 ай бұрын
@@psgamer-il2ptmillions of gullible sheep playing Russian roulette with their lives (thousands of people with LASIK complications of committed suicide) for a procedure that’s elective is absolutely crazy. Russian roulette is the most apt description of this. You roll the dice, say a prayer, pray that you’re not one of the 4-6% with long term life changing complications.
@thestarbran Жыл бұрын
I’m an ophthalmic technician (not medical advice): warm compresses twice a day and refresh PM gel drops are also good dry eye treatments. gel drops could potentially help prevent tearing/flushing out the muro128. dry eye never goes away, you unfortunately have to treat the symptoms & very rarely can you “cure” the root cause.
@toastbrot97 Жыл бұрын
I do think a certain amount of starbursts is completely normal for everyone. I have very good eye sight, close to perfect i would say (though it's been a while since i've gotten it testen) and i do have them as well. Not to the degree that you have them, but it is definitely the same thing because they also get more pronounced the starker the contrast between bright and dark areas. Mine have about 1/3 to 1/4 the size of yours if i would have to put it in perspective and they also get slightly more pronounced when i close one of my eyes, likely because of the pupils getting larger as well. Fingers crossed that yours will get better in the future!
@6point5 Жыл бұрын
Lots of horror stories with laser eye surgery. I had mine done 6 years ago, can't see anything up close (use cheater glasses). I was one of those fun ones who had their eye revert, and had to have Lasik twice. The second time is far, far more painful (for 4-5 days of stinging). I've tried to talk absolutely everyone out of doing Lasik i've met. My friend had PRK and can't even read his phone now.
@googlacco Жыл бұрын
your eyes do not revert, surgery is very much permanent rather the underlying presbyopia continues to worsen with age
@joez.2794 Жыл бұрын
Everybody's close vision worsens with age as your cornea becomes less flexible. As I approach 50, I can still read the red countdown numbers on the crosswalk as I approach an intersection, but finally had to join the "bread squeezers" as there's simply no way I'm reading print like that without cheaters. 🙂
@jack5mikemotown Жыл бұрын
as someone who wears contacts and goes through that mild inconvenience i feel like its probably just worth it to stick with that rather than risk laser eye surgery complications...
@clintgillespie8579 Жыл бұрын
Sorry to hear about your experience. I got PRK 9 years ago, and it's been really good for me. I haven't had any side effects and my vision is around 20/30.
@quinnobi42 Жыл бұрын
My dad got PRK laser eye surgery probably 15 years ago, and he's never mentioned to me having starbursts or dry eyes, so perhaps depending on how bad your vision was before the surgery, you're more likely to see side effects.
@supernova82 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, same as my dad. He did when this surgery was introduced, probably 25 years ago. He was working for the company that was introducing the procedure. They didn't want their employee to have big glasses. He still has perfect vision and he is 73 years old.
@danielch6662 Жыл бұрын
@@supernova82 I highly doubt that. How could he be 73 and have no presbyopia?
@classicalextremism Жыл бұрын
I had PRK in early December, and my experience tracks with this. I still see multiples of everythign and everyone. I see each stop light multiple times. Same with planets or stars, or rocket launches (live in Florida close enough to see launches at night). Everything has multiples ghosting around, and each of those ghosts and the main image have "starburst" light rays and halos. The text I am typing has duplicates smeared around, in different directions week to week. The same waking in pain, the dull ache from eye strain as you try to read or see... well anything... To see more clearly, I am squinting at everything all the time. According to the doctors office, my vision is "near 20/20". But only because the vision test has a gap between each line of text, and the after images dont step on each other as they do in normal text fields. The kerning is different. I will try that muro 128, thats a helpful call out. So far, I regret doing the surgery. I have lost visual acuity and live in pain. But its only about 3 months in, situation may improve.
@dann5480 Жыл бұрын
3 months post op is nothing, you're still going to get a lot better.
@Grk149 Жыл бұрын
It’s still early. I had LASIK January last year. From the beginning I could notice that my left eye had lots of doubling, mostly on the y axis (vertically) so for example while my right eye could see super sharp, with the left I could barely read words on tv, especially subtitles on a dark background, I could see multiple versions of each letter all on top of each other and slightly in different positions to the point that it was unreadable. It turned out that one of my eyes was having high pressure due to one of the drops I was using (side effect of anti inflammatories. As soon as that was addressed the pulsing i could see in my vision was immediately gone and the left eye started slowly seeing better. It ended up clearing completely at month 6-7. I can still see it sometimes but only when my eyes are tired, dry, which I think it’s normal even for non-operated people. Give it some more time, keep everything well moistened and hope all goes well!
@kata3827 Жыл бұрын
I LOVE the results of my lasik surgery. It`s been 18 years from the surgery and my eyesight is still perfect. I had dry eys maybe the first year after but that is all. I had -6,00 eyesight before so I could not see much of anything without glasses before 😅 Edit: my eyes being dry was never that severe, I never had to put eyedrops in the middle of the night or anything like that
@mememanfresh Жыл бұрын
do you have starburst? is it still 20/20?
@TehNetherlands Жыл бұрын
I had LASIK about 2.5 years ago. I'm very pleased with the result. It was a relatively minor correction, but being able to see sharp at a distance is such a joy, especially out in nature. Yes, I also noticed an increase in starburst effect, especially at night when staring at bright lights as you indicated, although it's nowhere near as bad as yours. Generally, the greater the correction, the more actual physical removal of tissue is necessary, and this in turn increases the chances of potential complications. There is a limit to how much tissue they can remove, and this in turn limits the maximum correction that can be achieved. It sounds like in your case it was on the edge of what was possible, and you kind of paid a price in terms of increased side effects. Just keep in mind that being near sighed is a real handicap that would bother you all day, while the halo and starburst effect are only really there a small part of the time. Would you really want to go back to poor vision? I guess that's a question people need to ask themselves before getting the surgery done.
@AndyThomasStaff Жыл бұрын
No one cares about the opinion of someone who had a minor correction. Don't be involved in this conversation. High ego loser, your advice is meaningless, don't give it.
@Story_time_funandnews Жыл бұрын
What was your eye power before surgery?
@completelybraindead Жыл бұрын
I got something done called SMILE, which is one of the newest. It's basically lasik, but instead of a flap they just cut a small slit and work through that slit. I get some Starbursting, especially if my eyes are dry (which is also an occasional occurrence after the surgery and never as bad as he describes). With that said, my Starbursts have never been that much worse than the glare that even my anti glare glasses has been, so it was really no net loss to me.
@LeBeautiful Жыл бұрын
Too bad SMILE is fairly new and not a lot of places that ik do that. I’m assuming it’s priced way more to?
@completelybraindead Жыл бұрын
@@LeBeautiful the procedure was priced about the same from what I remember (been about 2 years now), but it does require some more advanced hardware. I got it done at an actual eye Institute rather than some lasik mill. It seems as though it's also a higher skill procedure, which is why I'd recommend making sure you can find someone you can trust.
@die_hertz Жыл бұрын
I got something like astigmatism in one eye after SMILE, especially when it's dry. Hyaluronic eye drops improve it but effect does not last long :-(
@pshurygin Жыл бұрын
I've made SMILE two years ago, and while there were some issues initially, they are 90% gone by now. There were some haloing around the bright objects on the contrast background, but it became progressively better and pretty much gone now. I've used eye drops for about two moths, then I was fine without them. Never had anything close to that starburst demonstrated in the video.
@sadpepe7937 Жыл бұрын
Have you tried silicone-based eye drops? Because silicone can't easily be washed away by water/tears.
@danhayek Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing this. I had LASIK done in 2001 and have suffered many of the side effects you describe in detail for over 20 years. I saw amazing with contacts, a crisp 20/15, but I also had strong eye allergies to contacts, and found glasses very annoying. I wish I had waited longer or maybe gone to a different doctor, but it's hard to say that my outcome would have been appreciably better. The frustrations you describe are well known to me and very hard for those lucky enough to not suffer to fully comprehend. Maybe one day some better therapies will alleviate our lingering issues.
@daggar98 Жыл бұрын
Had PRK myself (opted over LASIK) due to flapless and lower incidence of dryness despite rougher recovery period in the immediate short term. Currently at 2.5 months on and loving every part of it, found as a chronic contact lense wearer I had much higher dryness day to day working in a room with AC. Post laser surgery and I can often go the day without a single eye drop, often just putting one in the morning, far less hastle than glasses and eye drops.
@Wolstenholmie Жыл бұрын
I'm 6 months out of PRK and having the same experience as you, it's way better than the daily contact lens dryness especially working an office job where I have to stare at a screen all day my eyes got SO dry before
@daggar98 Жыл бұрын
@@Wolstenholmie Great to hear! Many people do experience some dryness but it's never weighed up against chronic dryness (blepheritis) that long term contact lense wearers will develop undoubtedly that then make getting laser eye much harder!
@DarrenNevares Жыл бұрын
I've had multiple surgies involving my eyes but after 3 different surgeries to fix a lazy eye, sometimes twice for one eye, I think I'm good on just wearing glasses for the rest of my life with a minor astigmatism.
@mikouffins Жыл бұрын
I had my LASIK surgery two weeks ago and until two days ago, I had the photosensitivity and dry eyes. It is getting better and better constantly, and I no longer regret getting it. I also had astigmatism. The only thing I regret is not switching to contacts earlier in life because I now have marks from using glasses under my eyes and nose and now I look so different.
@M3CHR0M4NC3R Жыл бұрын
Story time! Years ago, I sat down on a bus bench. Next to me on the bench was a middle aged man. After a while of waiting for the bus I decided to start a conversation. Turns this guy is a eye surgery specialist. At this point in time laser surgery was becoming really popular, so I asked the man "would you yourself ever undergo laser surgery". His answer "Hell No!". This answer shocked me, so I asked why? He said "I would only do the surgery if it was a last resort, if I would go blind otherwise. The surgery only works for a couple of years before problems start to pop up. And I need my eyes for my job. Even telescope glasses will allow me to do so, but the possible problems from surgery could end my career within 5 years" I was stunned hearing this. I always remembered this random conversation I had on a bus bench.
@jucijuicy Жыл бұрын
I had LASIK in may this year and for the first month my nightvision was terrible, I basically couldn't leave the house safely at night. at 3 months it was a lot better, now at around 5 months I still have starbursts but they're quite subtle and I believe they're still getting better. I had some dryness in the first months but that also got a lot better and usually it doesn't bother me anymore. definetly glad I got it cause I used glasses for 20 years and it was expensive as heck because my myopia was so bad, the surgery was completely covered by my health insurance in Brazil, I just had to pay for the eye drops.
@ElZamo92 Жыл бұрын
I had PRK surgery done 15 years ago. It was the best decision I have made in my life. I was also EXTREMELY near-sighted (maybe worse than Taran). I do have the same problem with lights in the dark (mine is probably not as bad since I can still drive at night fine, it's just a bit annoying), but I'll take that ANY DAY over not being able to see without my glasses.
@timexyemerald6290 Жыл бұрын
Can polarized glasses fix the flaction???
@JarredSutherland Жыл бұрын
I had LASIK several years ago, my eyes are nowhere near as dry but even that being the case it is depressing when you have to endure those things. Several years ago it was bad enough that I had thoughts of suicide, etc. I feel for anyone who is enduring such a problem.
@anniecrowther8423 Жыл бұрын
Been there too. It’s a hell you really can’t describe.
@Blaowzir Жыл бұрын
what was your initial vision out of curiosity?
@_alysonh Жыл бұрын
Did you have severe dry eye?
@Bowens443 Жыл бұрын
Killing yourself for dry eyes? Mental issues
@Jason.family Жыл бұрын
I got laser eye surgery (LASIK) back in 2001. I had halos and starburst for about a year. I've heard many people that have had issues with PRK but nearly nobody I know has a problem with LASIK. Also, the military often pays for LASIK for soldiers. After that first year, I've never had any issues with my eyes.
@Pinhead650 Жыл бұрын
I had PRK about 10 years ago. I chose PRK over LASIK because I was boxing at the time. I had the same issues you're describing for the first 5 years or so. I had to force myself to keep my eyes closed when I woke up in the mornings to keep from wanting to gouge my eyes out. The pain was TERRIBLE. It felt like I had slept with sandpaper on the inside of my eyelids. Then I went keto and started fasting. I can't remember the last time I had dry eye or starbursts. Seriously, it's been years. I can drive at night and oncoming headlights don't starburst anymore.
@stevieboysw Жыл бұрын
I will say I got LASIK in 2006, and I had an amazing experience. I have mild Starburst at night but not as bad as yours look, and still way better vision than when I was wearing contacts or glasses. I don't have any issues with computer cursors or things like that. Having near perfect vision, being able to play sports and be active without the annoyance of glasses or contacts is so much nicer to me. It may have to do with the thickness of my eyes. I remember the eye doctor saying in the early appointment that I had a lot of "eye meat" and I could get laser surgey again in my 40s. I have also recently went to the optometrist for an eye exam and asked them about that and they said that yes I could still get surgery again. I have recommended it to many people and they have all had positive experiences like mine. I couldn't imagine the last nearly 20 years without laser surgery. Not to mention the money it saved from buying contacts and glasses. This is just my non scientific anecdote but LASIK really did change my life for the positive.
@TaxingIsThieving Жыл бұрын
What was your thickness
@exturkconner Жыл бұрын
I honestly had no idea people didn't experience starburst. I've always had it pretty badly. It radiates in every direction but worse in some than others. I guess I had always just assumed that was how everyone saw bright lights.
@subhagatabiswas9732 Жыл бұрын
True
@TheUndeadFish1 Жыл бұрын
I got LASEK back in 09, and honestly it was probably one of the best decisions I have ever made. I also had around -8.5 in one eye and -9.5 in the other with my prescription before the surgery. I had really bad light sensitivity to the point where I couldn't drive at night for around 2 months, and I needed to wear the ray charles glasses during the day for the first 2 weeks or so. After that however it has been amazing.
@ernest48914 Жыл бұрын
Oh wow -9.5? Was that reduced to 20/20 or do you still have some blur?
@thomasweber612 Жыл бұрын
@@ernest48914 after the surgery it was increased to 20/15 in my right eye, and 20/13 in the left. I haven't had my eyesight checked outside of when I renew my license, but its still at least 20/20 in both. The reason I was given lasek that they told me was because my eyes were so bad if there was a need for a touchup if I had lasik I wouldn't be able to have a followup due to the scarring.
@TheUndeadFish1 Жыл бұрын
@@ernest48914 one eye was corrected to 20/13 and the other was 20/15. I have no idea what they are now, but they do feel like they have gotten slightly worse. Whenever I have to look at the chart in the DMV they are still above 20/20.
@randallcraft4071 Жыл бұрын
Is there a reason you picked Lasek over Lasik? The only thing i understand about the difference is how the surgical site is cut, i think one takes the whole part off then sticks it back down the other i think does a flap.
@TheUndeadFish1 Жыл бұрын
@@randallcraft4071 The surgeon recommended it because my cornea's were apparently thin, and if they just directly applied the laser there wouldn't be a second chance for a touchup if I didn't end up with 20/20 vision after the surgery. What he didn't actually describe was how terrifying it would be to see the knife press against your eye, and distort your vision during the cut before I agreed to it. However after the first eye was cut and finished he told me to hold perfectly still the second time I didn't want to leave the other eye unfinished.
@icecreammm2 Жыл бұрын
I also had some issues after PRK eye surgery (done 15 years ago), I would see objects slightly double afterwards because of dry eyes. Adding eyedrops fixed the double vision for a while, until my eyes were dry again. But ... I preferred those annoyances above having to wear glasses or contacts. After a few years, the problems went completely away. I'm now very happy to have had laser eye surgery as it made my life a lot easier. About wearing contacts ... They made my eyes very sensitive and dry. In the beginning I could wear those for about 8 hours, but after a few years I couldn't wear them longer than 2 hours.
@casse82 Жыл бұрын
I have starbursts but laser eye surgery was among the top choices I've made. I actually got SMILE and not LASIK or PRK. Dry eyes were an issue for the first year or so, not anymore. Still about perfect vision after 8 years.
@MrTeaboar Жыл бұрын
This content is the stuff I subscribe to other channels. Amazing visualization, great script and just quite amazing documentation. Thank you!
@eformance Жыл бұрын
Have you tried glasses with anti-reflective coatings? I haven't had anything done to my eyes, but I get glare at night that glasses eliminate. You might see some benefit from anti-reflective coated glasses at night. The coating is originally intended to prevent reflections *inside* the lens, but it has the side benefit of reducing external glare.
@TaranVH Жыл бұрын
I didn't think that was even theoretically possible! I will look into it.
@sunshine_ocean3 ай бұрын
I did it, Lasik, 2 years ago, and it was the worst thing in my life. I have dry eyes and cannot drive when it is dark. I live in Sweden, which means it is also dark during the day in the winter. And I am still wearing glasses. This week, I had surgery to put a silicon plug.
@ConnorNolanTech Жыл бұрын
I wound up getting Lasik instead of PRK, and ended up with better nightvision than when I started, managed to keep my super close-up near-focus reading (though it definitely makes me feel woozier and it fatigues my eyes after a while) but I still have those same starbursts you mentioned, but I had those before from my astigmatism anyway.
@GhastlyHunger Жыл бұрын
I got standard LASIK and my starbursts have actually been significantly reduced.
@pkersoul Жыл бұрын
Nice to see more people bring awareness to these issues! I also got lasik about 3 years ago and my myopia actually came back and i've been suffering with these halos, starbursts, blurry night time eyes and floaty things in my FOV.
@monharris28 Жыл бұрын
wishing you the best moving forward
@SilentBeaver Жыл бұрын
Honestly thought these were all normal cuz I've lived with it all my life. Is staticy vision normal..?
@pkersoul Жыл бұрын
@@SilentBeaver dang no ,go see eye doctor for sure
@SilentBeaver Жыл бұрын
@@pkersoul Lol yeah I may do. I looked it up and apparently it’s rare and stuff. Linked to autism and adhd and anxiety. Unfortunately have all three, so I’m not surprised. Not damaging though but I’ll see about it. Hope all goes well for you too
@AmoniaLS Жыл бұрын
I've had LASEK (I think), the first first weeks were amazing during driving to actually be able to perceive depth, but the night starbursts are blinding and I usually avoid driving when it's dark since it feels like I need to drive blind for 0.5s every time opposite car drives too closely. My vision decayed with time after it got restored so I'm close to where it was originally and wearing glasses again anyway. Dryness in eyes doesn't happen often, I just randomly get an itch/'burns every few days that pass away in a minute, so might need to use eye drops more often or touch eyes less. Luckily no starbursts on cursor or I would go insane.
@electricpaper269 Жыл бұрын
As a side note, the newer white headlights should be banned, everyone should use the old yellow ones. Night driving is way more difficult now, especially on two lane hoghways.
@samuelmontypython8381 Жыл бұрын
My PRK surgeon also had PRK done on himself and he admitted that it took him 7 years to get to perfect night vision and another 2 years after that to get beyond perfect night vision. It's like a weird gift that gives when it wants over the course of a decade lol. I just got PRK done and I'm just now hearing these horror stories.
@raven4k998 Жыл бұрын
sooo PRK takes a while to work it's not instant fix for your eyes
@brands2131 Жыл бұрын
@@raven4k998well I certainly don't want to be tolerating something like that for more than a year, let alone 7 years and longer!!! Like even dry eyes for a week! Can't imagine that, I've never had dry eyes, maybe once, when I stayed up without sleep for 48 hours.
@raven4k998 Жыл бұрын
@@brands2131 yeah so bottom line glasses are preferable to surgery as they don't have that side effect
@Xeem_Pad Жыл бұрын
@@brands2131 you could have starbursts with glasses as well
@Derzull2468 Жыл бұрын
@@raven4k998 Get lenses implanted, one appointment per eye, completely reversible, procedure takes 30 seconds tops.
@nowheregirl2791 Жыл бұрын
I got lasik done. Had starbursts and halos in the beginning but it got so much better. The dryness isn’t that bad compared to the dryness I had with daily contact lens wear.
@00WhiteBlade Жыл бұрын
I got LASIK done 2 years ago and the halos never went away. my doctor told me that for whatever reason my scars didnt heal and wont ever fade.
@Story_time_funandnews Жыл бұрын
@@00WhiteBlade what was your eye power before surgery?
@dudeinanofficechair7662 Жыл бұрын
My wife had LASIK, but she was right in the sweet spot. Pupils normal sized, -5.5 prescription bad enough to make life miserable, but not stretching the capability of LASIK, done having kids but still young enough to not need reading glasses for a while. I was always worried she'd get in a car accident and lose her glasses, then get run over wandering in front of a truck, but we also camp a lot and that's a huge pain with contacts or glasses. She wanted the works at the time. Laser cut flap, custom wavefront correction, best surgeon in town. She had bad headaches for a couple days, then starbursts at night for a couple months. Now her vision is better than mine. She frequently points out it was the best $6k she ever spent. But there are risks, and if your eye surgeon isn't telling you what they are, you should probably leave and find one that will. Not all patients or doctors are created equal.
@jimmyjimjims7483 Жыл бұрын
I have a dual astigmatism (with blue eyes) so I have light sensitivity during the day and at night...well its a mess. Everything looks like a Van Gogh painting at night, taillights smear and neon signs turn to fuzz. At 30 years old I've thought about it but I've heard too many horror stories so I've decided to just live my life with glasses and deal with bad night vision.