LASIK Eye Surgery Checklist

  1. Know what makes you a poor candidate:

     Career impact - does your job prohibit refractive surgery?

    Cost - can you really afford this procedure?

    Medical conditions - e.g., do you have an autoimmune disease or other major illness? Do you have a chronic illness that might slow or alter healing?

     Eye conditions - do you have or have you ever had any problems with your eyes other than needing glasses or contacts?

    Medications - do you take steroids or other drugs that might prevent healing?

    Stable refraction - has your prescription changed in the last year?

     High or Low refractive error - do you use glasses/contacts only some of the time? Do you need an unusually strong prescription?

     Pupil size - are your pupils extra large in dim conditions?   

     Corneal thickness - do you have thin corneas?

     Tear production - do you have dry eyes?
  2. Know all the risks and procedure limitations:

Overtreatment or undertreatment - are you willing and able to have more than one surgery to get the desired result?

 May still need reading glasses - do you have presbyopia?

 Results may not be lasting - do you think this is the last correction you will ever need? Do you realize that long-term results are not known?

 May permanently lose vision - do you know some patients may lose some vision or experience blindness?

 Dry eyes – do you know that if you have dry eyes they could become worse, or if you don’t have dry eyes before you could develop chronic dry eyes as a result of surgery?

Development of visual symptoms - do you know about glare, halos, starbursts, etc. and that night driving might be difficult?

 Contrast sensitivity - do you know your vision could be significantly reduced in dim light conditions?

Bilateral treatment - do you know the additional risks of having both eyes treated at the same time?

 Patient information - have you read the patient information booklet about the laser being used for your procedure?

3. Know how to find the right doctor

 Experienced - how many eyes has your doctor performed LASIK surgery on with the same laser?

 Equipment - does your doctor use an FDA-approved laser for the procedure you need?

 Informative - is your doctor willing to spend the time to answer all your questions?

 Long-term Care - does your doctor encourage follow-up and management of you as a patient?  Your preop and postop care may be provided by a doctor other than the surgeon.

 Be Comfortable - do you feel you know your doctor and are comfortable with an equal exchange of information?

4. Know preoperative, operative, and postoperative expectations

 No contact lenses prior to evaluation and surgery - can you go for an extended period of time without wearing contact lenses?

 Have a thorough exam - have you arranged not to drive or work after the exam?

 Read and understand the informed consent - has your doctor given you an informed consent form to take home and answered all your questions?

 No makeup before surgery - can you go 24-36 hours without makeup prior to surgery?

 Arrange for transportation - can someone drive you home after surgery?

 Plan to take a few days to recover - can you take time off to take it easy for a couple of days if necessary?

 Expect not to see clearly for a few days - do you know you will not see clearly immediately?

 Know sights, smells, sounds of surgery - has your doctor made you feel comfortable with the actual steps of the procedure?

 Be prepared to take drops/medications- are you willing and able to put drops in your eyes at regular intervals?

 Be prepared to wear an eye shield - do you know you need to protect the eye for a period of time after surgery to avoid injury?

 Expect some pain/discomfort - do you know how much pain to expect?



 Know when to seek help - do you understand what problems could occur and when to seek medical intervention?

Know when to expect your vision to stop changing - are you aware that final results could take months?

 Make sure your refraction is stable before any further surgery - if you don't get the desired result, do you know not to have an enhancement until the prescription stops changing?

(http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/LASIK/reduce.htm)

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