Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens

/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #21  
It's been 10 years since I had the lense replacement in both eyes. For the first 8 years my vision was 20/20. I've notice a very small decrease in sharpness in the last 2 years, but nothing at all like they were before eye surgery.
I strongly recomment lense replacement and to be done by the very best eye doctor in your area. You'll be glad you did.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #22  
My doctor suggest the single vision saying he sees more complaints with the multifocal lenses. I went the safer route. Plus it was cheaper, like half the cost.
Been 2 yrs I still see good far as promised. Avoiding repairs was not optional, lens implants was.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens
  • Thread Starter
#23  
My doc called today and moved the first eye surgery to June 2nd. She was willing to do the surgery on Memorial Day, but the Surgery Center is closed.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens
  • Thread Starter
#24  
Tomorrow is my first eye surgery. My wife will bring me to the surgery center at 9.45am.

My biggest worry is that I can't eat anything after midnight tonight. That means no breakfast until after the surgery.

I'm not a happy camper if I don't have my meals at 6am, noon, and 6pm every day.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #25  
Tomorrow is my first eye surgery. My wife will bring me to the surgery center at 9.45am.

My biggest worry is that I can't eat anything after midnight tonight. That means no breakfast until after the surgery.

I'm not a happy camper if I don't have my meals at 6am, noon, and 6pm every day.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens
  • Thread Starter
#27  
It's been 4 hours since the surgery. Everything went well. I do have some discomfort in that eye. And it's still very cloudy. I think this is all normal.

I go back to see the doctor tomorrow morning.

The only other issue was the nurse trying to stick the IV in, missed twice and called another nurse who finally got it on the third try.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #28  
It's been 4 hours since the surgery. Everything went well. I do have some discomfort in that eye. And it's still very cloudy. I think this is all normal.

I go back to see the doctor tomorrow morning.

The only other issue was the nurse trying to stick the IV in, missed twice and called another nurse who finally got it on the third try.
Turf,
Glad you're home and recovering. Keep up with the eye drop schedule and you'll be fine.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens
  • Thread Starter
#29  
It's been a little over 24 hours since the surgery now. Went see my doctor this morning and she said everything looked good. My vision in the right eye tested at 20/30. She said that is normal and should improve soon. There is probably still a little swelling in that eye. I no longer have any pain or discomfort in that eye.

We removed the lense from my glasses for the right eye and I wore them with only the left eye lense for most of the day. I can see clearly out of both eyes, but they are not 'synchronized' so I did develop a headache after a while.

I picked up an eye patch, and I may try wearing that over my left eye to see if that works.

Even though it is still early, I am happy with the results. My left eye is scheduled for June 16.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #30  
Taking one lens out of the glasses generally doesn't work because the eye that has been corrected is corrected at the eye while the glasses correct at a short distance. When I had mine done, my doctor went on vacation between the 1st and 2nd eye. They gave me a soft contact lens for the uncorrected eye and that worked well.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #31  
The wife had both of her eyes done around 5 years ago. Nothing too fancy just got rid of the cataracts, corrected her vision to 20/20 and has blue-blocking in the lenses.

I've always joked that I was going to wait for photo-grey and x-ray vision. I'm not sure if light-adjustable and photo-grey are the same thing, but I've been wearing glasses that darken with sunlight for over 30 years (I can lose a pair of sunglasses quicker than an 10mm socket) and my experience is that they all gradually get darker with time and I'd worry that the same may occur with those lenses as well.

Personally, I'd wait until that tech is fully proven. If it's still around in 5 years then maybe I'd embrace it.
The technology continues to evolve…

Many patients make appointments after failing a driver license renewal…
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens
  • Thread Starter
#32  
Taking one lens out of the glasses generally doesn't work because the eye that has been corrected is corrected at the eye while the glasses correct at a short distance. When I had mine done, my doctor went on vacation between the 1st and 2nd eye. They gave me a soft contact lens for the uncorrected eye and that worked well.
Unfortunately contact lenses are not an option for me. After wearing contacts for about 40 years,I had to stop wearing contacts because my eyes became too dry.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens
  • Thread Starter
#33  
My left eye surgery is tomorrow. Again, my biggest concern is not being able to eat after midnight tonight.

For the last surgery, I did get a little lightheaded as they were prepping me for surgery. That was around 11am. That was probably caused from being hungry and being poked so many times for the IV.

So far, the right eye is doing very well. My vision is 20/20, but I did have a good bit of "flair" or 'starburst' when I drove at night recently. And I do see a few 'floaters' in that eye.

My doc said that happens in about half of the surgeries, and she can easily fix that with a laser in her office. It's known as secondary cataracts, but it's actually fragments from the lense that was removed.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #34  
So far, the right eye is doing very well. My vision is 20/20, but I did have a good bit of "flair" or 'starburst' when I drove at night recently. And I do see a few 'floaters' in that eye.

My eye doc explained to me that if I chose the multifocal lens option I should expect to see more "flare" at night. Which is why I chose the distance only lenses. LOVE my new vision, and getting ride of my heavy eyeglasses (I was so nearsighted that my eyeglasses were 9/16" thick!). But yes, I have to pack reading glasses with me all the time.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #35  
My eye doc explained to me that if I chose the multifocal lens option I should expect to see more "flare" at night. Which is why I chose the distance only lenses. LOVE my new vision, and getting ride of my heavy eyeglasses (I was so nearsighted that my eyeglasses were 9/16" thick!). But yes, I have to pack reading glasses with me all the time.
There is some "flare" effect. I have some rings around small bright lights like tail lights, but it hasn't been a problem. It's a trade off because I can easily read the dashboard without glasses which I really like.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #36  
Those sensitive to fasting should insist on being early on procedure day.

Every week patients leave saying that just can’t hold out and most are diabetic.

The surgeon will have as many as 24 procedures scheduled in a day with patients as early as 5:30 am arrival for 7 am procedure.

I do know cases where patient had something to eat and they got bumped to last on occasion.

Also, and I don’t know why a little black coffee without cream, sugar may be permissible depending on timing.

A few get so thirsty I will have them swish some cold water and spit it out…

Cases have been cancelled for gum chewing, smoking, etc…

Charge nurse will casually say what did you eat for breakfast and most of the time the answer is they said I couldn’t eat… maybe 2 a week will go into detail of what they ate.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens
  • Thread Starter
#37  
Also, and I don’t know why a little black coffee without cream, sugar may be permissible depending on timing.
The surgery center did tell me I could have one slice of dry toast and some black coffee or tea between midnight and 4am.

That ain't much, but I will most likely have that. I do plan to have a bowl of fresh fruit before midnight. I did have a good meal for supper. Pork roast over rice, green bean casserole, corn, fresh cantaloupe, and a brownie. It is Father's Day....
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #38  
Every time I go in for my eye check I am waiting for my eye doctor to tell me it’s time for my cataract surgery, it’s been going on seven years now and I am starting to feel that my eyes are getting more more cloudy finally
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #39  
Wife had glaucoma at 21. (Before we even met). One eye was 20/400. Her cataracts have been a blessing. It can't fix the peripheral she lost, but she is just like any 40+ person now with cheaters for reading.

I was blessed with 20/15 most of my life, but dad and his brother had macular degeneration. It is likely inevitable if I live long enough. Dad passed last year at 92. His older brother is still around, but essentially blind.
 
/ Cataract surgery and Light Adjustable Lens #40  
My left eye surgery is tomorrow. Again, my biggest concern is not being able to eat after midnight tonight.

For the last surgery, I did get a little lightheaded as they were prepping me for surgery. That was around 11am. That was probably caused from being hungry and being poked so many times for the IV.

So far, the right eye is doing very well. My vision is 20/20, but I did have a good bit of "flair" or 'starburst' when I drove at night recently. And I do see a few 'floaters' in that eye.

My doc said that happens in about half of the surgeries, and she can easily fix that with a laser in her office. It's known as secondary cataracts, but it's actually fragments from the lense that was removed.
Some floaters are normal. I too, had an unusually large number of floaters with my first eye lense implant. The Doc was able to remove a lot of the floaters, but a second separate Doc with special equipment would be needed for complete elemination - and at extra cost. In time, most of the floaters have dissipated, with a few showing up on very bright sunny days. On those days, some people around me will wonder why I'm swatting at non-existent flies :)
 

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