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Ophthalmologist

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You are an ophthalmologist at a laser surgery eye center. A patient, Violet, has been wearing contact lenses for years and is interested in possibly getting laser surgery on her eyes. Like many, she is nervous about the procedure.

You examine Violet and determine that she is a suitable candidate for laser surgery. Next you talk to her, explain the procedure, and try to help her decide whether or not she wants to proceed.

Read the description of laser surgery below. Then answer Violet's questions at the end.

Laser surgery treats vision problems such as near-sightedness, far-sightedness and astigmatism. It uses a computer-controlled excimer laser, a form of ultraviolet laser that generates almost no heat.

Prior to surgery the patient is given special eye drops that numb the eye. During the surgery a device called a speculum holds the eyelid open.

The beam of cool laser light is used to carefully reshape a thin layer of the cornea. The laser is very precise -- it has up to .25 microns of accuracy. By comparison, a human hair is about 50 microns thick. The removal of corneal tissue with laser pulses flattens the curvature of the cornea and improves the eye's ability to focus.

Because these pulses "dissolve" the molecular bonds of the corneal tissue without generating any heat, nearby tissues are not damaged. The structural integrity of the cornea is also protected.

Laser surgery patients who wear contact lenses are asked to not wear them for several days prior to the surgery. Following the procedure, you will be asked to keep your eyes closed for several hours and to use eye drops. There is typically a follow-up appointment the day after the surgery, and several more after that. These allow the doctor to check how well your eyes are healing.

Since 1988, more than four million excimer procedures have been performed worldwide.

(Excerpted from Dr. Stuart Landay's website with permission)

These are the questions that Violet asks you:

  1. Can laser surgery correct my astigmatism?
  2. How does the computer reshape the eye?
  3. When I think of lasers, I think of heat. Is the laser hot?