Andrew E. Smyth wrote:
> I read everything I could about cataract surgery in the last 3
> years--mostly posters in this group. I chickened out three times,
but
> finally had to have it 3 days ago because my left eye was so cloudy.
> (my right eye was fine, I think this cataract developed from a boxing
> injury 35 years ago.)
> Anyway, I had a fantastic result--20-20 vision in one day. The
Doctor
> even said he'd eliminate the astigmatism and that seems to be what
> happened.
> What has surprised me was no pain at all, and a minor scratchy
feeling
> in the eye which has completely disappeared in two days.
> I had two big floaters and one medium one for decades. (I even gave
> them names, they were old friends). They seem to be gone. However I
> can see that the floaters are still there but very out of focus---the
> vision is in good focus.
> But it is hard to notice the floaters without trying.
> No rings or glare or bad effects at night, either.
> I had had a phenomenon of a light at the outer margin of vision
> starting low and going on and off with each heartbeat as it rose in
> vision. This was before surgery. It seems to be gone too. Maybe a
> change in inner ocular pressure is the reason.
> The only slightly bad thing is that I can see that what I thought was
> my very good left eye has some yellowing and the colors I thought
were
> so bright and vibrant are actually very subdued.
> The acuity of the right eye is still 20/20 corrected. And the large
> color and clarity difference doesn't bother me.
> I'm not sure about getting the second eye done. Maybe I was just
> lucky. And the Doctor was annoyed with me during surgery--he kept
> saying "stop moving." I thought I could keep my eye still by
fixating
> on the light, but the lights became a swirling kaliedascope. It
seems
> the Doctor is more concerned about the patient keeping his head
> perfectly steady. So I don't want to risk my moving or the Doctor
> making a slip resulting in vitreous loss.
> Sorry for the long post. But I liked to read all the long posts when
> deciding on surgery. EyeKnowWhy almost talked me out of it. But
then
> I saw that despite all his misgivings, he too, was for cataract
> surgery.
> PS Don't worry about the assembly line procedure or the fact that the
> Doctor conducts the exam in 10 minutes. I think getting a surgeon
who
> has performed over 500 surgeries is the key. (mine had done 10,000)
Correction. I mean "what I thought was my very good right eye"--the
unoperated on one, which I can now see is a bit cloudy and yellowish.
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