FDA takes a closer look at Lasik complaints

jillio

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Lost in the hoopla of ads promising that laser vision surgery lets you toss your glasses is a stark reality. Not everyone's a good candidate, and an unlucky few do suffer life-changing side effects: lost vision, dry eye, night-vision problems.

A decade after Lasik hit the market, unhappy patients will air their grievances before the Food and Drug Administration on Friday as the government begins a major new effort to see whether warnings about the risks are strong enough.

How big are those risks? The FDA thinks that about 5 percent of patients are dissatisfied, but it can't provide more specifics -- and is pairing with eye surgeons for a major study expected to enroll hundreds of Lasik patients to try to better understand who has bad outcomes and exactly what their complaints are.

"Clearly, there is a group who are not satisfied and do not get the kind of results they expect," FDA medical device chief Dr. Daniel Schultz said Thursday. The study should "help us predict who those patients might be before they have the procedure."

About 7.6 million Americans have undergone some form of laser vision correction, including the $2,000-per-eye Lasik. Lasik is quick and, if no problems occur, painless: Doctors cut a flap in the cornea -- the clear covering of the eye -- aim a laser underneath it and zap to reshape the cornea for sharper sight.

The vast majority, 95 percent, of patients see more clearly after Lasik -- some better than 20/20 -- and are happy they had it, said Dr. Kerry Solomon of the Medical University of South Carolina, who led a review of Lasik's safety for the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery.

But one in four patients who seeks Lasik is told that he or she is not a good candidate, he said. And there is little information about just how badly the 5 percent who are dissatisfied actually fare.

Solomon estimates that fewer than 1 percent of patients have severe complications that leave poor vision. Other side effects, however, are harder to pin down. Dry eye, for instance, can range from an annoyance to problems so severe that people suffer intense pain and need surgery to retain what little moisture their eyes form. That's the kind of question the FDA's new study aims to answer.

Dry eye is common even among people who never have eye surgery, and it increases as people age. Solomon says that 31 percent of Lasik patients have some degree of it before the surgery and that about 5 percent worsen afterwards.

But dry-eye specialist Dr. Craig Fowler of the University of North Carolina says other research suggests that 48 percent of patients experience some degree of dry eye at least temporarily after Lasik. Cutting the corneal flap severs nerves responsible for stimulating tear production, and how well those nerves heal in turn determines how much dry eye lingers long-term, he said.

Even if the risks are low, that's little consolation to suffering patients.

"As long as you know any ophthalmologist that's wearing glasses, don't get it done," says Steve Aptheker, 59, a Long Island lawyer who was lured by an ad for $999 Lasik and suffered severe side effects that required seven surgeries over four years to restore his vision.

The flaps cut in his cornea literally became wrinkled when they were laid back down, blocking his vision and causing severe pain. A few surgeries later, with a different doctor, Aptheker could function better but couldn't drive at night and saw a halo around objects, which caused serious distortion even during the day. With more operations as new technology hit the market, Aptheker said, today his right eye sees as well as it did with glasses before Lasik, but his left remains fuzzy and requires halo-reducing drops.

The FDA has long known of those side effects and thus for years has a Web site with warnings for Lasik patients and required that doctors give every potential patient a brochure outlining risks. Friday, the agency will ask its outside advisers whether its warning efforts go far enough.

But Lasik has been refined in recent years to offer crisper vision with fewer risks, said Dr. Steven Schallhorn, an ophthalmologist who oversaw the Navy's refractive surgery program until last year when, based in part on his research, the Navy began allowing its aviators to get Lasik.

Schallhorn advises patients to seek "all-laser Lasik," in which a thin flap is created using a more precise laser instead of a blade, combined with "wavefront-guided" software that maps subtle irregularities in the cornea before it's zapped.
FDA takes closer look at Lasik complaints - CNN.com

Good to know that the FDA is investigating the failures and the problems even though the population experiencing them is small. And that they are investigating whether patients are getting all of the information reccommended from physicians prior to agreeing to surgery. Hope this is a trend that carries over into the implant industry.
 
That's interesting, Jillio! My health has always been precarious, and I've had more surgery than I care to think about. One thing I have always been squeamish about is eye surgery. I have worn glasses since the age of 18 mos due to astigmatism and far sightedness. A few years ago, the optometrist that examined my eyes tried to push the Lasik procedure on me. He was very pushy saying how the procedure would improve my vision and so on. I just laughed, told the guy that I have been wearing glasses since before the age of 2, and I was very happy with them. Then, my Dad and I left the place with my eye glass prescription in hand!

I do not trust anyone to mess with my eyes! If I *needed* eye surgery, that's one thing, but I am not going to undergo a surgical procedure I do not need; just so I can pad someone's wallet.
 
That's interesting, Jillio! My health has always been precarious, and I've had more surgery than I care to think about. One thing I have always been squeamish about is eye surgery. I have worn glasses since the age of 18 mos due to astigmatism and far sightedness. A few years ago, the optometrist that examined my eyes tried to push the Lasik procedure on me. He was very pushy saying how the procedure would improve my vision and so on. I just laughed, told the guy that I have been wearing glasses since before the age of 2, and I was very happy with them. Then, my Dad and I left the place with my eye glass prescription in hand!

I do not trust anyone to mess with my eyes! If I *needed* eye surgery, that's one thing, but I am not going to undergo a surgical procedure I do not need; just so I can pad someone's wallet.

I've worn glasses since the age of 7 due to astigmatism. With age, I have also developed some far sightedness, so I use a multifocal lens. I see very well with my glasses on, and despite having been approached about Lasik nearly everytime I go in for an eye exam, I have chosen not to take the risk involved with the procedure. Of course, the doctor always says, "But you wouldn't have to bother with glasses or contacts any more!" I perosnally don't find glasses to be a bother...I've been wearing them nearly all of my life! They are just a part of me at this point.
 
How so, Vampy?
First, they find something that fixes people in some way.

Next, they prove that it's the best method possible.

Later, they find that it wasn't the best method possible or that there are flaws.

It's like Weight Loss Surgery. They say it's a great thing. Later, they come up with all kinds of stories how it supposedly cures diabetes or causes us to have abnormal health problems. :dunno:
 
First, they find something that fixes people in some way.

Next, they prove that it's the best method possible.

Later, they find that it wasn't the best method possible or that there are flaws.

It's like Weight Loss Surgery. They say it's a great thing. Later, they come up with all kinds of stories how it supposedly cures diabetes or causes us to have abnormal health problems. :dunno:

Okay. Thanks for clarifying for me. I agree.
 
I've worn glasses since the age of 7 due to astigmatism. With age, I have also developed some far sightedness, so I use a multifocal lens. I see very well with my glasses on, and despite having been approached about Lasik nearly everytime I go in for an eye exam, I have chosen not to take the risk involved with the procedure. Of course, the doctor always says, "But you wouldn't have to bother with glasses or contacts any more!" I perosnally don't find glasses to be a bother...I've been wearing them nearly all of my life! They are just a part of me at this point.

:gpost: I feel the exact same way as you do! I've been wearing glasses so long that I really don't know anything different. I've also been in bifocals since age 15, so wearing glasses really is no big deal.

Also, to the point of the procedure, I don't think that many health insurance plans pays for it. I know Medicaid doesn't, or didn't. Another factor in my turning it down.
 
I have had doctors and family members push at me to get this surgery but I refuse to get it cuz I am scared that something will go wrong and I would end up with poorer vision.
 
:gpost: I feel the exact same way as you do! I've been wearing glasses so long that I really don't know anything different. I've also been in bifocals since age 15, so wearing glasses really is no big deal.

Also, to the point of the procedure, I don't think that many health insurance plans pays for it. I know Medicaid doesn't, or didn't. Another factor in my turning it down.

No, its still considered an elective surgery, so insurance companies balk at paying for the procedure.
 
I have had doctors and family members push at me to get this surgery but I refuse to get it cuz I am scared that something will go wrong and I would end up with poorer vision.

Yeppers....that same old "fix it" approach when it doesn't need to be fixed any way other than the way that is already working!
 
My niece had it done and she love it. She has no problems with it.

I would love to have it done, too because I am afraid of losing my eyeglasses and would have a hard time finding it. Yes, I am that nearsighted! I would wait and see about my other eye problem. I would go for lasik if my other eye problem is stopped for good. I also have astigmastism.
 
I have heard that night blindness is a common symptom.
 
I had the surgery several years ago. Absolutely no problems. I'm extremely satisfied with the results.

No doctor ever "pushed" me into it. It was something that I really wanted for myself.

Insurance did not pay for any of the cost. Hubby gave me a gift certificate for the surgery.

I had both eyes done at the same time.

I don't have night blindness.

I do have dry eyes but I had them at least 10 years prior to the surgery.
 
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