What Is Refractive Surgery?
In order for you to fully understand how refractive
surgery works, you need to understand how your eye works. This
basic knowledge will help you determine if LASIK is right for
you. The primary purpose of your eye is to focus light. When the
rays of light are not focused properly, you need glasses or contact
lenses.
Your eye works very much like a camera. Light
enters the eye through the cornea, the clear front surface or
“window” of the eye. As the light passes though the
cornea, it is bent or refracted. This bent light then travels
through the pupil and into the lens. The lens acts to fine tune
the focus of light onto the retina. The retina turns the light
energy into electrical impulses that travel along the optic nerve
from the eye to the brain, where the image is interpreted.
If you have a refractive error, then light is
not focusing on the retina in the back of your eye properly. In
order to change this problem and improve your vision, you can
choose to have refractive surgery. Refractive surgery is a common
procedure that uses a laser to reshape your cornea so that light
refracts onto your retina correctly. Light that may have focused
too far in front of, or behind your retina before laser surgery
will now focus directly on it, giving you much clearer vision.
Although refractive surgery cannot guarantee 20/20 vision, it
can significantly improve your eyesight.