New trend in laser eye surgery tailors eyesight to profession, lifestyle

By Andrew Nusca | Oct 6, 2009 |

A new trend is emerging at the forefront of laser eye surgery: patients who want to tailor their eyesight to suit their lifestyle or profession, hoping for a bespoke optical edge in their field.

Are you a hunter who could use better long-range vision?

There’s a surgical procedure for that.

Are you a tailor who needs to optimize your vision to the short distance between you and your textiles?

There’s a surgical procedure for that.

Are you a long-haul trucker and need eyesight that’s optimized for the road and the night?

There’s a surgical procedure for that, too.

Laser refractive surgery — known to many in the U.S. as LASIK — is traditionally used to alter the shape of the cornea to correct myopia (short-sightedness) or hyperopia (longsightedness). Now, wavefront technology can map 250 points on the cornea and iris in an attempt to repair vision conditions that can’t be fixed with contact lenses or glasses, such as a “halo effect” around lights.

NASA originally developed wavefront sensing technology for the Hubble Telescope.

A Times Online article notes that the procedure is “one of the three most common surgical treatments in Britain”, amounting to about 100,000 people who undergo the procedure each year. According to the article, about 20 million have had it worldwide, and “an increasing number have their corneas tailored to meet specific demands.”

One doctor, Julian Stevens of Moorfields Eye Hospital, says in the article that he’s performed tailored treatment for members of the British special forces and pilots who need better vision at night.

The refractive power of a lens is measured in diopters. “Vision changes by about 0.3 diopters at night,” he said. “If you are a sniper that’s critical. It is also important for long-distance lorry drivers, who need excellent night-time distance vision.”

Professor Stephen Trokel, who first introduced the excimer laser to eye surgery in 1983, says in the article that he’s operated on a leading soprano (reading music) and a catcher for the New York Yankees (tracking baseballs during night games) in his New York clinic.

The development also has implications for the elderly, since the eye’s ability to focus on close objects declines with age.

But senior citizens aren’t the only ones. Middle-aged professionals in Britain are opting for “monovision,” where one eye is customized for distance vision, the other for close reading.

Even U.S. presidents are into it:

Professor Marguerite McDonald, who performed the world’s first excimer laser treatment in New Orleans in 1987, said she had received several requests from US presidential candidates: “They never wanted to look helpless on the campaign trail because they couldn’t read their notes. They wanted to send a message that they were young.”

What do you think: great advancement, or dicey development?

(Perhaps we should just stick to bionic contact lenses.)

 
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  •  
    1

    dave_helmut

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    Just wondering

    250 points? I no next-to-nothing about the technical details of the surgery but does this imply a laser makes 250 cuts on your eye/cornea?

    If so, are there alternatives that give greater "resolution" to the
    overall procedure?

    ie... "This machine is better because it makes 512 cuts yielding better
    results"?

  •  
    2

    paladin2

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    is this a documented fact?

    Since I was born with glasses on (mom says it made my delivery hell) I've been following Lasix for years waiting till it had universal acceptance and proven results. Since I'm legally blind in one eye (20/250 is considered 'blind') and close in the other I still have a pilots license and a Commercial level drivers license. But glasses are HELL!! And is this procedure something you should go to NYC or London for or has it reached the simplicity where it's safe to go to the place in the mall? I'd settle for regular old 20/20 but the night time flying option has me intrigued. 20/10, now that's a medical miracle!

  •  
    3

    psion@...

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: New trend in laser eye surgery tailors eyesight to profession, lifestyle

    I will laser my eyes when I go to an optometrist and am told that glasses are no longer made. This surgery is still "beta" as far as I am concerned.

  •  
    4

    A Non E-Moose

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: New trend in laser eye surgery tailors eyesight to profession, lifestyle

    I had LASIK performed in Phoenix over a decade ago. It was one of the best investments I've ever made. You don't have to go to NY or London. But, I wouldn't go to a mall, either. Check major metropolitan areas nearby, then do a little research on the doctors and clinics performing the procedure in that area. One of the great things about the internet is, if a doctor is doing bad, you'll be able to find a lot about it. If you only find a few good things mentioned, that's good too. People don't often go to the trouble of mentioning good.

    I'd highly recommend it. Do your research. Get a couple consultations. Then, make your decision.

  •  
    5

    Hate Malware

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: New trend in laser eye surgery tailors eyesight to profession, lifestyle

    Cool, so i could have my eyes customised so that i wouldn't need a scope on my sniper rifle? Maybe bionic contacts that vary according to the needs are a better option.

  •  
    6

    afzal.ballim

    10/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: New trend in laser eye surgery tailors eyesight to profession, lifestyle

    I had surgery done in a research hospital in Switzerland 7 years ago. Cost a lot, but probably the best investment I've ever made! (hell, it cost about as much as I spent on glasses, contact lenses, etc. over 5 years).

  •  
    7

    Weasel82

    10/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: New trend in laser eye surgery tailors eyesight to profession, lifestyle

    I'm intrigued by the baseball player having his eyes adjusted - At what point does that constitute an unfair advantage? What's the difference between "enhancing" your body with drugs and enhancing it with surgery?

  •  
    8

    billfranke@...

    10/08/09 | Report as spam

    What's the difference between "enhancing" your body with drugs and enhancin

    Drugs are addictive for almost everyone who takes them, but surgery
    usually isn't. OTOH, I don't see a principled difference between
    them. Nor do I see a principled difference between training one's
    body to perform well in a particular activity and taking drugs or
    having surgery to reach the same end. The moralists have merely
    drawn their personal metaphysical lines in the sand and expressed
    their opinions about why it's no good to cross those lines. Anyone
    who says that it sets a bad example for kids is talking nonsense
    and making jokes. Adults are generally such "do as I say and not as
    I do" hypocrites that popping the ugly pustule of performance-
    enhancing drugs is like cutting off the head of a local hydra: it
    comes back at you twice as strong.

  •  
    9

    bobh2000

    10/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: New trend in laser eye surgery tailors eyesight to profession, lifestyle

    I apologize in advance for any negative tone that may be present in my remarks but I am tired of people who get off topic and turn serious articles into forums for their political agendas. As is often the case they make nonsensical comparisons.

    Let's review. Wavefront eye surgery is equivalent to taking steroids in sports and where do we draw the line.

    Drugs to correct deficiencies are not prohibited in sports. Eye drops, iron supplements, vitamins, prescription medicine and many other drugs are totally legal. Lasik, glasses and contact lenses all are used to correct vision in individuals with less than perfect vision. They are all legal.

    What is not legal are potentially deadly steroids, legal and illegal, when used without prescription, and illegal recreational drugs.
    Steroids are legal when administered by a physician for the proper theraputic reasons. "Bulking up" is not one of the reasons.

    Comparing corrective vision surgery to taking steroids is absolutely moronic. And it's not an unfair advantage because there's nothing saying that if one player does it that other cannot. The concept of people with perfect vision undergoing a procedure with a degree of risk of destroying that perfect vision simply to improve their night vision in Yankee Stadium is idiotic.

    And what response can one even write to the person who drew a conclusion that eye surgery can eliminate the need for a sniper to use a scope for long range shooting! You can't even begin to explain certain concepts to the clueless. Like, for instance, good vision is required EVEN WITH A SCOPE.

    And THINK ABOUT IT...are you seriously suggesting that wearing glasses is an unfair advantage (an "enhancement") and that near sighted (or far sighted) ball players must be banned from wearing corrective vision device or having corrective surgeries? If you carry forward the steroid comparison then eyeglasses and contacts MUST be banned. And nobody who has ever had an eye surgery would ever be allowed to participate in competitive sports.

    Or perhaps you would ban all surgeries for athletes. No more rotator cuff repairs or tendon reconnections. Does the fact that Tommy John was a MUCH better pitcher after surgery to his arm mean that he gained an unfair advantage and should have been declared a "cheater"?

    Glasses and eye surgery, as referred to in this article, are both to correct a deficiency. And for any aspect that is favored during a surgery there is a payback in another area. Unfortunately, there will always be those that must highjack a serious article about medicine helping society function more effectively into "conspiracy theory" trash.

  •  
    10

    rboxcar

    10/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: New trend in laser eye surgery tailors eyesight to profession, lifestyle

    Wow! I didn't know how lucky I was. I was born with monovision so I don't have to spend thousands of dollars for laser surgery. Used to be that all my middle-aged cohort thought I just has weird eyes, now evidently they will all envy me.

  •  
    11

    sco@...

    10/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: New trend in laser eye surgery tailors eyesight to profession, lifestyl

    Is there a medical procedure for only focusing on the useful posts, and
    ignoring the "moronic" ones? wink

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Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic. He was most recently Executive Editor of News and Blogs at ZDNet. Prior to that he was executive news editor at eWeek and news editor at Baseline. He also served as the East Coast news editor and finance editor at CNET News.com. Larry has covered the technology and financial services industry since 1995, publishing articles in WallStreetWeek.com, Inter@ctive Week, The New York Times, and Financial Planning magazine. He's a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism and the University of Delaware.

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Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan has nothing to disclose. He doesn't hold investments in the technology companies he covers.

Andrew Nusca

Andrew J. Nusca is an associate editor for ZDNet and SmartPlanet. As a journalist based in New York City, he has written for Popular Mechanics and Men's Vogue and his byline has appeared in New York magazine, The Huffington Post, New York Daily News, Editor & Publisher, New York Press and many others. He also writes The Editorialiste, a media criticism blog.

He is a New York University graduate and former news editor and columnist of the Washington Square News. He is a graduate of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He has been named "Howard Kurtz, Jr." by film critic John Lichman despite having no relation to him. A native of Philadelphia, he lives in New York with his fiancée and his cat, Spats.

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Andrew Nusca

Andrew J. Nusca does not hold any investments in the technology companies he covers.
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