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Austin
Dallas
El Paso
Fort Worth
Houston
San Antonio
Arlington
TX
Key-Whitman Eye Center
910 N. Davis, Suite 400
Arlington, TX 76012
(866) 605-4455
Bastrop TX
Texan Eye
85 Loop 150 West
Bastrop, TX
(512) 3037300
(512) 3212106
Bellaire TX
Eye Center of Texas
6565 West Loop South
Suite 650
Bellaire, TX 77401
(713) 797-1010
Holladay LASIK Institute
Bellaire Triangle Building
6802 Mapleridge,
Suite 200
Bellaire, TX 77401
(713) 668-7337
The Laser Vision Center
5555 W. Loop South
Suite 150
Bellaire, TX 77401
(713) 666-4224
Burnet TX
Texan Eye
2801 South Water St.
Burnet, TX
(325) 2472020
(512) 7562131
(800) 2522020
Cedar Park
TX
Hill Country Eye Center
12171 West Parmer Lane
Cedar Park, TX 78613
(512) 528-1144
Colleyville
TX
Total Eye Care
6114 Colleyville Blvd.
Colleyville, TX 76034
(817) 416-0333
Galveston
TX
The Eye Clinic of Texas
2302 Bernardo De Galvez Ave
Galveston, TX 77550
(800) 423-3937
Georgetown
TX
Patel Eye Care
1102 S. Austin Ave Ste. 102
Georgetown, TX 78626
(512) 240-5862
Texan Eye
950 West University #108
Georgetown, TX
(512) 9303434
(800) 7227567
Hurst TX
Texas Eye and Laser Center
1872 Norwood Drive, Suite 200
Hurst, TX 76054
(817) 540-6060
(877) 57-LASIK toll free
Irving TX
The M LASIK Dallas Center
2412 Irving Mall
Irving, Texas 75052
(972) 889-3937
Tylock Eye Care & Laser
Center
3100 N. MacArthur Blvd.
Irving, Texas 75062
1 (800) NEW-EYES
Katy TX
Mann Eye Institute and Laser Center
5618 Medical Center Dr.
Suite 203
Katy, TX 77494
(281) 392-3937
1 800 MY VISION
Keller TX
Total Eye Care
1834 Keller Pkwy
Keller, TX 76248
(817) 431-4900
Laredo TX
Shah Eye & Lasik Vision Center
8607 McPherson Rd, Suite 102
Laredo, Tx 78045
(956) 753-0202
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League
City TX
The Eye Clinic of Texas
1100 Gulf Fwy S # 114
League City, TX 77573
(800) 423-3937
Lubbock
TX
West Texas Eye Associates
5109 80th Street
Lubbock, TX 79424
(806) 792-5900
McAllen TX
Peña Eye Institute
1400 East Ridge Rd.
Suite 10
McAllen, TX 78503
(956) 661-8733
Midland
TX
Michael D. Tschoepe, MD
4109 N. Midland Drive
Midland, TX, 79705
(830) 625-6905
(877) 952-7373 toll free
Mission TX
Shah Eye Center
2025 E. Griffin Parkway
Mission, Tx 78572
(956) 583-0202
New
Braunfels TX
LASIK Real Eyes
Vision Center San Antonio
218 E. Austin Street
New Braunfels, TX 78130
(830) 625-6905
Michael D. Tschoepe, MD
218 E. Austin St.
New Braunfels, TX 78130
(830) 625-6905
(877) 952-7373 toll free
Pasadena TX
Eye Center of
Texas
4415 Crenshaw Rd
Pasadena, TX 77504
(281) 998-3333
Plano TX
Boothe Eye Care & Laser Center
3900 W. 15th St.
Suite 104
Plano, TX 75075
(214) 328-0444
Key-Whitman Eye Center
3060 Communications Parkway,
Suite 205
Plano, TX 75093
(866) 605-4455
Lasik Vision Institute
3604 Preston Rd
Plano, TX 75093
(972) 599-2834
1). The M LASIK Dallas Center
7200 Bishops Road
D-14
Plano, Tx 75024
(972) 889-3937
2). The M LASIK Dallas Center
1208 Village Creek
Ste.104
Plano, Tx 75093
(972) 889-3937
Richardson
TX
Advanced Lasik Center
670 W Campbell Rd, Ste 100
Richardson, TX 75080
(972) 889-3946
Lasik Center
670 W. Campbell Road #100
Richardson, TX 75080
(972) 889-3937
The M LASIK Dallas Center
670 W. Campbell Road
Suite 100
Richardson, Tx 75080
(972) 889-3937
Sugar Land
TX
Eye Center of Texas
15400 SW Fwy
Sugar Land, TX 77478
(281) 277-1010
Mann Eye Institute and Laser
Center
15999 City Walk,
Suite 270
Sugar Land, TX 77479
(713) 580-2525
1 800 MY VISION
Webster TX
Eye Center of Texas
450 Medical Center Boulevard,
Ste 305
Webster, TX 77598
(281) 332-1397
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Laser Eye Surgery
One of the most common terms used when talking
about laser eye surgery is Lasik. However, laser
eye surgery and Lasik, are not synonymous. There
are two fundamentaly distinct types of laser eye
surgery: Lasik and PRK. Lasik is just one type of
laser eye surgery.
The term Lasik or LASIK stands for
Laser-Assisted-in-Situ Keratomileusis, and
represents an effective surgical treatment option
for individuals with refractive errors such as
myopia (nearsightedness), hyperopia
(farsightedness), and astigmatism. The Lasik
procedure is designed to reduce or correct these
refractive errors by permanently changing the
shape of the cornea (the clear covering of the
front of the eye). The procedure combines the use
of microkeratome (a surgical instrument used to
perform a flap in the cornea) and the excimer
laser to remove thin layers of cornea. When the
cornea is reshaped, the eye's focusing power is
increased and the individual's visual acuity is
enhanced.
The standard Lasik surgical procedure includes
five steps:
1). The eye is numbed with anesthetic drops.
2). The surgeon will place a special instrument
in the patient's eye in order to hold the eyelids
open and prevent blinking.
3). In order to avoid unnecessary eye movements
the patient is asked to fixate their eyes on a
designated light while the surgeon creates a flap
in the cornea with the help of the blade device
called microkeratome. The flap stays hinged to
the rest of the cornea at one end.
4). A computer-controlled laser light (which was
previously programed based on the correction
required by the refractive error) is applied to
the inner layers of the cornea reshaping it.
5). At the end of the surgery, the surgeon gently
replaces the flap to the original position
allowing the eye to heal itself naturally.
When Lasik procedure is performed, the cornea
surface will be reshaped based on the eye's
refractive error that requires correction.
In patients with hyperopia
(farsightedness) (where the
cornea is not round, which causes the
light to focus behind the normal focal
point), the laser beam will steepen the
surface of the cornea causing the eye's
focus point to be moved closer to the
normal focus point for creating a clearer
image.
In patients with myopia
(nearsightedness) (where the
cornea is too steep causing the images to
focus in front of the normal focus
point), the laser beam will flatten the
surface of the cornea allowing the light
to focus at the normal focus point in the
back of the eye.
In patients with astigmatism
(where the cornea is curved irregularly
impending the light to focus properly on
the retina), the cornea is being reshaped
in order to allow the eye to focus
properly.
There are three advanced alternatives to the
standard Lasik procedures: CustomVue
Lasik, Conventional IntraLasik, and Custom Vue
IntraLasik.
CustomVue Lasik
is a custom-tailored laser vision
procedure designed to correct the
imperfections of the eye by using the
conventional hardware used in a standard
Lasik procedure in combination with
advance software called Wavefront. This
procedure uses a 3-dimensional
measurement of the optical system in
order to offer an extremely precise,
individual vision correction, that cannot
be achieved through the traditional Lasik
procedure.
Conventional
IntraLasik is an alternative to
the standard Lasik, where the corneal
flap is created using a computer-guided
femtosecond laser beam - significantly
decreasing the risks associated with the
microkeratome incision.
Custom Vue
IntraLasik is a procedure that
utilizes the methods of the above two
procedures. The corneal flap is created
using the femtosecond laser while the
excimer laser that reshapes the cornea is
guided based on the CustomVue Watvefront
technology. This procedure is the most
expensive laser eye surgery.
PRK stands for PhotoRefractive
Keratectomy, and is the original laser
surgery that preceded Lasik. Although it used to
be the most common refractive surgical procedure,
PRK became one of the alteratives available for
patients that cannot have a flap cut into their
cornea and therefore undergo the standard Lasik
procedure. PRK is a procedure where the
epithelium (outer layer of the cornea) is
manually ablated (rather than cutting a flap in
the cornea) in order for the laser beam to
reshape the remaining corneal tissue. Although
PRK requires a longer recovery period and more
discomfort following the procedure than the
standard Lasik option, PRK reduces the risks
associated with having a flap cut in the cornea
and the risks of ectasia (a condition in which
the inner eye pressure can push against the
thinned corneal wall causing it to bulge and
worsen the vision).
The PRK procedure includes three steps:
1). The eyes are numbed with a special anesthetic
administrated as eye drops.
2). The surgeon will place a retainer in the
patient's eye in order to keep the eyelids open
and avoid blinking.
3). In order to avoid unnecessary eye movement,
the patient is asked to look at a target light,
while the laser (programmed by a computer) sends
pulses of light which painlessly removes corneal
tissue based on the patient's particular
prescription.
There are two advanced forms of PRK that are
performed: LASEK and Epi-LASEK.
LASEK,
which stands for Laser Assisted
Sub-Epithelial Keratomileusis, is a
relatively new variation of PRK where a
solution of alcohol is used to soften and
remove the epithelium (the outer layers
of corneal tissue) with the help of a
fine blade (trephine). The removed tissue
will be placed back after the laser
reshapes the underlying corneal tissue.
LASEK is an effective alternative to
Lasik in patients that have a too thin or
too steep cornea. This procedure has been
associated with a faster recovery of
sensation or nerve function on the
cornea.
Epi-LASEK,
which stands for Laser Assisted
Sub-Epithelial Keratomileusis, is the
newest addition to the refractive eye
surgeries. The Epi-LASEK procedure
involves a gentle loosening of the
epithelium sheet using a blunt, plastic
oscillating blade called epithelial
separator. The advantage offered by this
procedure is that the plastic blade
separates the epithelium tissue from the
eye, avoiding possible adverse reactions
caused by the alcohol solution used in
the LASEK procedure. Once the procedure
is over, the removed epithelium sheet is
placed back on the eye and will be kept
in place by a special oxygen-permeable
contact lens that will allow the
epithelial cells to grow back normally.
This procedure is recommended in patients
with a thin cornea who don't have enough
tissue to cut a flap or in individuals
that have professions or hobbies with an
increased chances to be hit in the eye
(reducing the risk of the flap to be
dislocated).
Sources:
American College of Eye Surgeons, American Board
of Eye Surgery, What is Lasik?, Date unknown
TLC Laser Eye Centers, What is Laser Vision
Correction? Lasik, Date unknown
USA Food and Drug Administration, Lasik Eye
Surgery, 2008
Medem, Medical Library, Laser in-situ
Keratoermileusis: Lasik, October 1997
AllAboutVision, PRK: The Original Laser Eye
Surgery, by Liz Serge, October 2007
AllAboutVision, LASEK Eye Surgery: How it Works
by Liz Serge, July 2008
AllAboutVision, Epi-LASEK Eye Surgery: How it
Works by Liz Serge, May 2007
WiseGeek, What are the Different Types of Laser
Eye Surgery?, Date unknown
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