Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how did you improve from -10 to -8.5?
OP here; I’m not sure how I improved- I think it was just aging. From what I gather, getting older also “corrects” nearsightedness a little but in ways I don’t understand (per my uncle the eye doctor). I should add that I think my total prescription is still over -10 once you include my astigmatism. I ended up getting phakic intraocular lenses implanted in my eyes (basically like cataract surgery but they left my natural lenses in) and it is AMAZING to not need glasses or external lenses.
Wow! Instead of LASIK, or did you actually have cataracts and this is why you had the lenses implanted? I would love not to need glasses or contacts but have always been a little afraid of the surgery.
OP here. I don’t have cataracts so it was just an alternative to LASIK. I wasn’t a good candidate for LASIK as I have dry eye and asian eyes are shaped a little differently (flatter, I think?) so they wouldn’t have been able to scrape enough layer of eyeball off to correct my vision. I considered PRK but I liked that the implantable contacts are removable (though arguably your eyes probably won’t return to pre-surgery condition). The surgery was expensive and required a lot of pre-op appts too. But I’m very happy with the results!
https://us.discovericl.com/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how did you improve from -10 to -8.5?
OP here; I’m not sure how I improved- I think it was just aging. From what I gather, getting older also “corrects” nearsightedness a little but in ways I don’t understand (per my uncle the eye doctor). I should add that I think my total prescription is still over -10 once you include my astigmatism. I ended up getting phakic intraocular lenses implanted in my eyes (basically like cataract surgery but they left my natural lenses in) and it is AMAZING to not need glasses or external lenses.
Wow! Instead of LASIK, or did you actually have cataracts and this is why you had the lenses implanted? I would love not to need glasses or contacts but have always been a little afraid of the surgery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone seen the research about contacts slowing the onset of nearsightedness? I didn't start them until 8the grade, and I'm still wary of trying this with younger kids, but might be worth it if it helps. Playing sports in glasses is miserable especially with helmets/goggles.
Yes, you mean rigid gas permeable contact lenses, not soft contact lenses, correct? I've seen some research on this, and PP posted about orthokeratology.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how did you improve from -10 to -8.5?
OP here; I’m not sure how I improved- I think it was just aging. From what I gather, getting older also “corrects” nearsightedness a little but in ways I don’t understand (per my uncle the eye doctor). I should add that I think my total prescription is still over -10 once you include my astigmatism. I ended up getting phakic intraocular lenses implanted in my eyes (basically like cataract surgery but they left my natural lenses in) and it is AMAZING to not need glasses or external lenses.
Yep, I was -10 and now in my 40s, am -9 in my "bad eye" LOL (other eye is -8.5). Eye dr. says as we age some of the nearsightedness is corrected.
Just curious why this is even a concern if you had a successful option to correct your vision? Assuming your kids do you have bad myopia, surely in 10 or 20 years they will have even more safe options for correction.
I'm not willing to do surgery unless I have to, so I'm looking forward to cataracts when I'm older! My mom just got hers and loves not having to have even reading glasses even more.