On May 2, 7:13*pm, George <gh424NO824S...@cox.net> wrote:
> My brother is 65 and has reached the point of needing cataract
> surgery. *He is told he has severe astigmatism in his right eye, and
> moderate astigmatism in the left. *I don't know what this means in
> terms of diopters - he doesn't have his prescription.
>
> His understanding from talking to his doctor, is his left eye is
> dominant at distance, and his right eye dominant close up. *He
> therefore proposed correcting the left eye for distance and the
> right for close-up, with the hope that he would see well enough at
> all distances not to need glasses at all. *I know that some people
> (my own ophthamologist is one of them) fit contacts this way, but I
> wonder what percentage of people are unable to adjust to this. *It
> seems if you can't adjust, then you have to wear bifocals all the
> time, and that having implanted lenses done this way is somewhat
> risky.
>
> In addition, the doctor is proposing to use a toric lens in the
> right eye, and to do a LRI procedure, whatever that is, in the left
> where the astigmatism is less severe. *Does that make sense? *Would
> using toric in both be better?
>
> I'd appreciate any comments or suggestions.
Alcon's toric IOL is supposed to work quite well for moderate to high
astigmatism. LRIs also work, but the results are reported to be less
reliable. From what I've read, the majority of people who try
monovision can adapt to it, but a minority cannot. When someone has
never attempted monovision before, modified monovision (AKA blended
vision) might be a better bet. This would involve correcting the
dominant eye for distance and the nondominant eye for intermediate
vision. With this type of correction, weak readers would be needed
for some tasks, although the person could probably function quite well
without glasses most of the time.
If your brother has concerns about his doctor's recommendations, it
wouldn't be a bad idea to consult another doctor for a second
opinion. I'd select an experienced, board-certified cataract/
refractive surgeon. If you live in the U.S., you can use the
directory at
www.aao.org to find one.