|
Photo
Refractive
Keratectomy
(PRK)
uses a laser to reshape the cornea, the front surface of the
eye, in order to change its ability to focus light on the
retina.
The laser used in PRK and
LASIK is an excimer laser, one of many different varieties of lasers
used in different types of eye surgery. The excimer laser
is a "cold" laser, meaning it does not produce its
effect by heat, but by removing tissue from the cornea in order
to change its natural curvature.
This laser has been used for
approximately 10 years now, and more than a million of these
surgeries have been done worldwide. However, the FDA did
not approve this laser for use in the U.S. until 1996, so
much of the early research and refinement of this technique was
done in other countries, such as Jordan.
At the present time, PRK has
been approved in the U.S. and Jordan for treating
nearsightedness, astigmatism and farsightedness.
PRK was first used to treat
nearsightedness. In a nearsighted eye, light rays come to
focus in front of the retina. By flattening the front
surface of the eye, the cornea, the eye's natural focal point
can be changed so that it focuses light more precisely on the
retina. This is done by removing tissue from the center
part of the cornea.
An eye with astigmatism has an
irregularly shaped cornea. To improve the focus of an
astigmatic eye, different amounts of tissue need to be removed
from different parts of the cornea to make the surface
more symmetric
and eliminate the visual distortion caused by astigmatism.
In
a farsighted eye light rays come to focus behind the retina. The
cornea needs to be more sharply curved in order to focus light
rays on the retina and thus tissue is removed from the edges of
the cornea in order to make it "steeper".
The
technique of PRK involves removing the surface "skin"
of the eye in order to expose the sturdy tissue underneath which
gives the eye its shape. This is done using a local
anesthetic eye drop and is painless. This is different from
LASIK in which a flap is cut in the cornea to expose the tissue
underneath. The laser is then used to shape the underlying
cornea in a procedure that usually takes one minute or less. For
most patients having PRK, a protective contact lens is then
placed on the eye, which allows the surface of the eye to
re-heal over a period of several days, and prevents most of the
discomfort that might be associated with the recovery period.
Usually vision improves almost
immediately, but during the recovery period vision is generally
not as good as it would be with the best possible glasses or
contact lenses. Once the protective contact lens is
removed after several days, vision
continues
to improve and may be at its best level within approximately one
week to one month after the surgery. Usually eye drops are
used on a frequent basis during the first 4-5 days to lubricate
the eye, prevent infection and decrease any inflammation
resulting from the surgery. Eye drops are decreased
rapidly over the upcoming weeks, though in some cases patients
may use eye drops for several months after surgery.
The success of PRK in eliminating
the need for glasses or contact lenses is excellent. FDA
research showed that 95% of patients had vision of 20/40 or
better after surgery, and approximately 2/3 of patients had
20/20 vision. The proportion of patients who achieve
"perfect" 20/20 vision is even greater at the lower
levels of nearsightedness, while at higher levels of
nearsightedness there is a somewhat larger proportion of
patients where vision is vastly improved but does not reach the
20/40 level.
Risks of PRK are minimal.
There is a small chance, as indicated in the statistics above,
that postoperative vision may be dramatically better, but not
equivalent to 20/20 vision. A small number of patients may
have a weak pair of glasses that they use occasionally.
The only other significant risk is that of a slight corneal
"haze", which may restrict vision after surgery to
slightly less than 20/20. This occurs in a very small
percentage of cases and usually disappears on its own in 3-6
month. However, it may increase the chance of some
difficulty with halos around lights at night or symptoms of
glare in bright light. This haze or scarring is much more
common when correcting higher levels of nearsightedness and very
rare at lower levels.
|