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Feed: LASIK Monocular Vision Correction - AggScore: 50.0



Summary: LASIK Monocular Vision Correction


For years, doctors are hesitant to recommend LASIK surgery for patients who were farsighted. These patients can see clearly at distance, but had difficulty focusing on close objects. This is a problem common to many people as they age and usually starts showing symptoms in the early to late 40s. The first sign of becoming clairvoyant, is that these people have to hold reading materials farther away in order to be able to focus clearly. Finally, they find that their arms are long enough to reach the correct point. LASIK can correct the problem to be clairvoyant, but at the expense of the distance to lose focus. A typical far-sighted person can see distant objects without any problem, but whereas LASIK surgery can solve the problem of development, the focus distance is sacrificed in the process. Most people believe that exchanges of this just a problem for another. However, research has shown that there is a way that LASIK may help patients who suffer from presbyopia. It seems that the brain has powerful features for processing images. The solution LASIK for hyperopia is to perform the procedure on one eye, hence the name "monocular vision". An eye exam is used to determine which eye is best suited for remote viewing and the eye remains unchanged. The other eye is subjected to the LASIK procedure and is then optimized to be close to focus. When the patient sees an object, whether near or far, the brain accepts images from both eyes and merge the images through a complex treatment. In essence, one eye focuses on distant objects and the other eye focuses on nearby objects. The brain uses both images and the end result is that patients can now see both near and far - problem solved! If you are in an age when you just started noticing your farsightedness, it may be best to wait a couple of years before the laser eye surgery. The reasoning is that during the first onset of presbyopia, your eyes tend to change frequently, so if you have the procedure done too soon, your eyes change could nullify the results in a year or two, so you may need to have the procedure repeated. If you wait until your eyes stabilize, or at least slow the process of change, you're likely to achieve results in the longer term. Many doctors have LASIK surgery offered an option when you choose to have the procedure - for a relatively small sum, they will provide you with repeated interventions to free life if they are still necessary. This way, if your eyes do not change as you age, you can have the LASIK procedure repeated, without additional charge. This may be a wise investment if you're in the age group 40 to 50 years. If you have the procedure for correcting vision monocular, you'll find it takes a little getting used to. After all, your eyes have provided very similar signals to your brain for a long period. Now that each eye focuses differently, your brain has to adapt and deal with different images in one view.
Want to separate LASIK Fact from Fiction? Get The Straight Story on all the different types of eye surgery laser and learn the procedure is best for you. You will learn the advantages and disadvantages of all the popular methods of vision enhancement surgery - just visit http://LaserImprovedVision. com for more details. You learn a lot!
[eba kw="vision correction" num="4" ebcat=""]

LASIK Monocular Vision Correction


For years, doctors are hesitant to recommend LASIK surgery for patients who were farsighted. These patients can see clearly at distance, but had difficulty focusing on close objects. This is a problem common to many people as they age and usually starts showing symptoms in the early to late 40s. The first sign of becoming clairvoyant, is that these people have to hold reading materials farther away in order to be able to focus clearly. Finally, they find that their arms are long enough to reach the correct point. LASIK can correct the problem to be clairvoyant, but at the expense of the distance to lose focus. A typical far-sighted person can see distant objects without any problem, but whereas LASIK surgery can solve the problem of development, the focus distance is sacrificed in the process. Most people believe that exchanges of this just a problem for another. However, research has shown that there is a way that LASIK may help patients who suffer from presbyopia. It seems that the brain has powerful features for processing images. The solution LASIK for hyperopia is to perform the procedure on one eye, hence the name "monocular vision". An eye exam is used to determine which eye is best suited for remote viewing and the eye remains unchanged. The other eye is subjected to the LASIK procedure and is then optimized to be close to focus. When the patient sees an object, whether near or far, the brain accepts images from both eyes and merge the images through a complex treatment. In essence, one eye focuses on distant objects and the other eye focuses on nearby objects. The brain uses both images and the end result is that patients can now see both near and far - problem solved! If you are in an age when you just started noticing your farsightedness, it may be best to wait a couple of years before the laser eye surgery. The reasoning is that during the first onset of presbyopia, your eyes tend to change frequently, so if you have the procedure done too soon, your eyes change could nullify the results in a year or two, so you may need to have the procedure repeated. If you wait until your eyes stabilize, or at least slow the process of change, you're likely to achieve results in the longer term. Many doctors have LASIK surgery offered an option when you choose to have the procedure - for a relatively small sum, they will provide you with repeated interventions to free life if they are still necessary. This way, if your eyes do not change as you age, you can have the LASIK procedure repeated, without additional charge. This may be a wise investment if you're in the age group 40 to 50 years. If you have the procedure for correcting vision monocular, you'll find it takes a little getting used to. After all, your eyes have provided very similar signals to your brain for a long period. Now that each eye focuses differently, your brain has to adapt and deal with different images in one view.
Want to separate LASIK Fact from Fiction? Get The Straight Story on all the different types of eye surgery laser and learn the procedure is best for you. You will learn the advantages and disadvantages of all the popular methods of vision enhancement surgery - just visit http://LaserImprovedVision. com for more details. You learn a lot!
[eba kw="vision correction" num="4" ebcat=""]
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Date Added: 02/21/2011
Date Approved: 02/21/2011
By: Anonymous
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