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Since the early days of LASIK surgery, improvements have repeatedly been discovered. One of the biggest has been Wavefront-guided LASIK. Now we have the VISX iris registration, which is an improvement on wavefront technology and was recently given FDA approval.
Wavefront-guided LASIK
It’s also called Custom LASIK, for good reason.
In the diagnostic stage, the wavefront system takes many measurements of each cornea in tiny detail. From these, it makes 3_D maps, which it displays on the system’s computer monitor. The information contained in these maps is used to calibrate the laser for treatment.
Nobody else in the world has eyes exactly like yours. These maps are created in such tiny detail that they can’t be mistaken for anybody else’s, and the laser treatment based on them will be unique to you. It’s an entirely customized treatment.
Eye movements
When you lie down for your treatment on the patient bed that’s part of the wavefront unit, you’re moving your eyes from a vertical to a horizontal orientation, and in that change, sometimes the eyes rotate, which is called cyclotorsional movement.
The eyes could make other movements too, in between the mapping stage and the treatment:
That means that the measurements done on your eyes while you were sitting will be very slightly wrong now that you’re lying down for treatment. The wavefront diagnostic information needs to be slightly modified to align the laser to the eyes’ new positions.
Previous ways of aligning treatment
Dr. Khanna needs a reference point for aligning the laser during treatment. In the past there have been two ways of setting the reference point:
Manual – with a sterile pen, Dr. Khanna made tiny marks on the cornea to indicate where the laser would be focused during treatment. At the time of treatment, he manually positioned the patient’s head so as to line the laser up with the marks.
This method was prone to human error at times. Also, the ink used to make the marks was short-lived, drying up after a minute or so.
Automatic iris registration
The outside boundary of the iris does not change, only the inside boundary when the pupil changes size. So iris registration uses the center of the pupil as the reference point, targeting the laser beam on that center, as it relates to the outside of the iris.
During treatment, the Wavefront software works with two images of your eye:
Because of this continual automatic readjustment of the laser, Dr. Khanna can treat exactly those areas which his or her diagnostic tests revealed as needing treatment.
To learn more about Iris Registration, please contact the Khanna Institute of LASIK & Refractive Surgery today to schedule your initial appointment.
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| Los Angeles LASIK Surgery Disclaimer: Dr. Khanna serves eyecare patients in Los Angeles and surrounding areas. This site is for informational purposes only. It is not intended to be medical advice for those seeking laser vision correction, but to provide information about the Los Angeles, California LASIK Surgeon, Doctor Rajesh Khanna, M.D. Dr. Khanna proudly serves patients throughout Southern California and Orange County including Los Angeles, Bakersfield, Beverly Hills, Burbank, Camarillo, Malibu, Oxnard, Santa Barbara, Santa Monica, Thousand Oaks, Valencia, and Ventura. |
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