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In San Diego, a lot of doctors are doing promo for $2500 for both eyes also.
try to schedule it all at once in the same year (LASIK, Veneer, Crown, Dental implant, Liposuction, gas/mileage to the doctor offices, etc), so you can go over 10% of AGI to get the tax deduction.
You can have just one eye worked on at a time.They do each eye as a separate one, right? Cuz I'm limited to $2500 FSA so if I can stagger them between two different fiscal years, I can divert more $$ tax free.
Lasik is not without risks, risks are higher the more near-sighted a person is. I looked into, and decided the risk of permanent blindness/double vision/chronic migraine headaches was not worth the convenience of not wearing glasses. Actually, I like taking off my glasses sometimes, and seeing all the lights as blurry Christmas tree lights. ISHA2018 mentioned being strongly nearly sighted at -6....that is mild-moderate nearsightedness. My nearsightedness is moderate-severe (-12 & -13), severe would be more like -18. People with mild-moderate nearsightedness are much more likely to have good results than people with moderate & higher near-sightedness. I'd recommend considering your own degree of near-sightedness when deciding whether to get Lasix. It is also more imperative to pick a doctor who is equipped to give you chronic follow-up care, if you have moderate or higher near-sightedness, as the recovery is often not as smooth as for people with lesser near-sightedness and many times a 2nd "enhancement" surgery will be needed. As Corytrade mentioned, PRK is also worth looking into, it seems to have a better safety profile than Lasix (but longer recovery post-op), especially for people with moderate & higher near-sightedness.
Also look into PRK surgery, that is what I had. I think most doctors can do either. PRK surgery doesn't require a flap opening on the eye. Healing time, and after effects are different. I got it done in Jan. 2010 and still see great to this day.
People with high near sightedness should speak with a trust worthy opthalmologist on LASIK vs ICL and weight the pros and con's before proceeding.
Dang! I thought my -8 and -8.5 was bad!
I was told by my optometrist that I'm at the worse end that many will do lasik on. He specifically recommended someone from UCLA that he warned me will be very conservative and might even say I'm not a good candidate. Still haven't made the eval appt.
Lasik is not without risks, risks are higher the more near-sighted a person is. I looked into, and decided the risk of permanent blindness/double vision/chronic migraine headaches was not worth the convenience of not wearing glasses. Actually, I like taking off my glasses sometimes, and seeing all the lights as blurry Christmas tree lights. ISHA2018 mentioned being strongly nearly sighted at -6....that is mild-moderate nearsightedness. My nearsightedness is moderate-severe (-12 & -13), severe would be more like -18. People with mild-moderate nearsightedness are much more likely to have good results than people with moderate & higher near-sightedness. I'd recommend considering your own degree of near-sightedness when deciding whether to get Lasix. It is also more imperative to pick a doctor who is equipped to give you chronic follow-up care, if you have moderate or higher near-sightedness, as the recovery is often not as smooth as for people with lesser near-sightedness and many times a 2nd "enhancement" surgery will be needed. As Corytrade me
ntioned, PRK is also worth looking into, it seems to have a better safety profile than Lasix (but longer recovery post-op), especially for people with moderate & higher near-sightedness.
I had the ICL done due to my eyes being -10 & 11. After ICL i can see 20/20 out of my left eye but only 20/40 outof my right due to some fibrous deposit on the lense from inflammation. This scatters the light which cause things to look foggy. The only way to clean that up is to replace lense, but that won't guarantee the inflammatory reponse wouldn't just occur again. But together I still see 20/20 and I just have to wear sun glasses outdoors on sunny days.I just had this very convo with an optho.
Leaning ICL at the moment...