My
consult went well. They did several
scans on my eyes; I assume mapping them out, checking the cornea and the retina
and everything in between. Dr. Wiley was
shocked when I told him about my contact use.
“And you’re a nurse!” he said, as though I should have known better
(sadly, in my nursing education and career there was little information
regarding eye health—something I hope to change when I become a nurse
educator). When I mentioned my worries of complications such as halos and chronic dry eye, Dr. Wiley actually chuckled and said if I was able to wear contacts consistently for months, he was fairly sure that I would never have a problem with dry eyes. As for the halos, I would be getting Custom LASIK and PRK, which decreases the risk of halos and glares significantly.
Ultimately, Dr. Wiley said that due
to the thin cornea of my left eye, he would recommend PRK. I would get LASIK in the right eye. He said I would have to come back after I was
contact-free for two weeks for a pre-op exam to be sure but that I was a great
candidate for vision corrective surgery.
I scheduled my surgery for the summer, after I was done with spring classes so
that I would have time to heal before starting classes again in the fall. The pre-op exam would be three days prior to the surgery. In two months time, I would be free of corrective lenses!
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