the new home of suddenly susan

i will never complain about wearing contacts or glasses again

March 14, 2008 · 20 Comments

after reading this NYT article Lasik Surgery: When the Fine Print Applies to You

I WAS vain.

That’s the only way I can explain why I willingly let a doctor cut my corneas with a laser: vanity.

Little did I know when I chose Lasik surgery that I would not end up satisfied like the friends and acquaintances who raved about their post-glasses existence. Instead, my days are complicated, since I am dealing with side effects that are far more bothersome than being unfashionably four-eyed.

I had been wearing eyeglasses since I was 8, and I was tired of never seeing the stars without glare, of not being able to go rock-climbing unless I secured my glasses. Not to mention the horn-rimmed barrier between me and a date.

I had trouble figuring out which side of a contact lens to stick onto my eye, so I never really gave contacts a chance.

I had been considering Lasik — short for laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis, which entails cutting and reshaping the cornea — since the Food and Drug Administration approved it in the late ’90s. Because I was not too nearsighted and not too old, ophthalmologists told me I was an excellent candidate. But I wanted to wait until more people had gone under the laser.

Roughly 800,000 patients have had Lasik annually since 2000, spending about $2.5 billion on the procedure every year, said David Harmon, the president of Market Scope, a research company for the ophthalmic industry in Manchester, Mo.

The American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery reports a 95.4-percent patient satisfaction rate for Lasik, based on a recent analysis of research worldwide. The researchers found 19 studies specifically addressing patient satisfaction from the last decade, encompassing roughly 2,022 patients. (Some had been post-op for a month; others for a decade).

Most ophthalmologists are confident about the efficacy of Lasik, as well as another popular procedure — photorefractive keratectomy, or P.R.K. Both are designed to correct nearsightedness, farsightedness and astigmatism.

“It’s very few people who don’t have a superb outcome, especially with the new technology,” said Dr. Marguerite McDonald, the president of the International Society of Refractive Surgery of the American Academy of Ophthalmology.

About five of my friends had undergone the surgery. “Life-changing,” they cooed. “Miraculous!” Because my 40th birthday was looming, my parents offered me either a cello or Lasik. I chose Lasik. But first, I looked up studies online and consulted three doctors. Each did a spate of tests and pronounced me an excellent candidate.

I asked about the risks, and they explained that some people come away with dry eye, double vision, decreased contrast sensitivity and decreased night vision. Some see halos around lights. I was assured these side effects were rare, and usually fleeting.

Ultimately, I chose Dr. Sandra Belmont, the founding director of the Laser Vision Correction Center at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center. Dr. Belmont also runs a corneal fellowship program at Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital.

A doctor who was a patient of hers recommended her. She charges between $4,500 and $5,500; I paid $4,500, nearly $1,000 less than other quotes I had received, a consideration since my insurance, like most, does not cover elective surgery.

I signed a consent form confirming that I understood the risks. I thought I did understand them. I did not know then that 5 to 10 percent of patients need to have their vision fine-tuned — or in industry parlance, “enhanced” — after surgery because of an under- or over-correction, according to John Ciccone, a spokesman for the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery.

Nor had I spoken to any individuals who wished they had never had the procedure — of which, I have since learned, there are plenty.

On April 13, 2007, I had the surgery. Dr. Belmont’s colleague examined me the next day. My vision was a little blurry, but apparently that was normal. Dr. Belmont said that everything looked good on subsequent visits, too. But the blurriness never went away.

At night, I saw halos around streetlights; neon signs bled; the moon had two rings around it like Saturn. My eyes felt sore, a result of dry eye, which also causes sporadic blurriness.

Dr. Belmont told me that sometimes women of a certain age who are undergoing hormonal changes or who take certain medications get dry eye. It would have been nice if I’d known my advanced age (39) might be problematic before I sat in the chair.

I cut out all prescription and nonprescription pills. Didn’t help. The doctor told me to use Refresh Plus, over-the-counter drops that temporarily help dry eye. The drops cost around $12 a box; I go through two boxes a week. She also prescribed Restasis eye drops, which can help increase tear production. They didn’t for me.

True, I no longer wear glasses. But the 20/20 line on the eye chart is blurry. I can make it out only if I squint, and it takes about a minute to read. My doctor views this as proof of the surgery’s success.

“I do see it as a success,” Dr. Belmont told me in a recent interview. She also has said repeatedly that these troubles will pass. “In 18 years of practice, I’ve never had a patient whose symptoms don’t go away. Most patients take three to six months to heal.”

But I see my slow-squint reading as a sign of failure. I thought I’d be able to decipher words in the real world at a glance. My consent form said: “The patient understands that the benefit of the Lasik/P.R.K. procedure is to have an improved uncorrected visual acuity.” I took that to mean that my eyesight would be 20/20. Most doctors, on the other hand, focus on the words “improved uncorrected visual acuity.”

“Not every patient has the potential to see 20/20,” Dr. Belmont told me this month. So, if your eye can see 20/20 with glasses or contacts, the doctors try to replicate that, but there are no guarantees. Dr. Belmont said, “You do the best that you can.”

On its Web site (www.fda.gov/cdrh/lasik/risks.htm), the F.D.A. cautions patients to “Be wary of eye centers that advertise ‘20/20 vision or your money back’ or ‘package deals.’ ” (Still, some refractive eye surgeons’ phone numbers end in 2020.)

Nearly a year later, my problems remain. Still, I’m not mad at my doctor. I’m mad at myself. No one forced me to do it. In our quick-fix culture, we forget that there are risks with any surgery, elective or not.

Between 1998 and 2006 the F.D.A. received 140 negative reports relating to Lasik, including double vision, dry eye and halos, said Mary Long, a spokeswoman. Granted, this is not that many, but Ms. Long said, “If this many people are responding to an adverse event, there are probably others who are not.”

After concluding that too few well-designed studies have examined quality of life after Lasik, the F.D.A. put together a task force in 2006 to design a clinical trial to explore the subject. A pilot study is now under way at the National Eye Institute in Bethesda, Md.

LOOKING back, I do not think my doctor and the other experts I consulted adequately represented the pitfalls. It’s one thing to say that dry eye is “annoying,” as Dr. Belmont did; it’s another to explain how feeling as if your eyes are coated in Vaseline may make every waking moment a chore.

Perhaps it depends on what your definition of success is.

“People say, ‘Well, you don’t wear glasses anymore,’ ” said Barbara Berney, 53, of Rockford, Ill., who had the surgery in 2001 and now reports dry eye, night blindness, dimmed vision, halos and starbursts. “Unless you see what I see, you have no frame of reference.”

Unhappy Lasik patients, some with worse experiences than mine (one man I spoke to needed a corneal transplant), have created about a dozen Web sites. The 12 patients I talked with all reported feeling as I did, gaslighted. They said they kept telling their doctors that they couldn’t see, and that their doctors kept telling them that they could.

A few doctors have told me that they think they can help my dry eye, but I worry they will suggest more surgery, and I haven’t gone to see them. A few optometrists said they could fit me with special lenses to moisten my eyes, and I may have to go that route.

Meanwhile, I walk by eyeglass shops and wish I needed to go inside.

Categories: what i saw today

20 responses so far ↓

  • Jae Young // March 15, 2008 at 2:33 pm | Reply

    I’m emailing this article to my parents. We always have the “Girls should get surgery” fight . If I got elective surgery, damn straight the only kind I’d get would be dimples, and even then I prolly wouldn’t cos they wouldn’t be cute like natural ones are.

  • suddenly susan // March 16, 2008 at 2:31 pm | Reply

    let me see if i understood what you wrote. when you say that you and your parents have the “girls should get surgery” fight, does that mean that your parents really think that girls “should” get surgery? as opposed to boys (who don’t have to look pretty)??

    i’ve only had surgery once — a life-saving procedure — and i can’t imagine repeating that terrifying and painful experience just to look better.

  • Jae Young // March 16, 2008 at 3:40 pm | Reply

    My parents are sort of old school, read sexist, so they think girls should do whatever is necessary to be “attractive” to get married. Half of my cousins have gotten elective surgery, well okay 쌍꺼풀수술. My eyes are 짝짝이–one has 쌍꺼풀 and one does not, so we fight about this constantly.

    My brothers escape this hounding because they are boys and are attractive enough. (I admit, they are okay looking and symmetrical enough, and quite tall.)

    But the gender distinction sort of fails because my dad is really vain and has discussed possibly getting plastic surgery for his eyes, cos his lids are dropping, even tho he is scared shitless of surgery.

    I’ve refused to get Lasik because I am afraid of being the person who gets fucked, even before reading this article. I know several people who have gotten it and they don’t suffer from those side affects but a few have started to have to wear glasses again, to which I say, wtf? Why bother wasting that money if in 5 years you have to wear glasses AGAIN? Do you know how many trips I could go on? Meals I could eat? Yeah, no thanks.

  • Amyable // March 16, 2008 at 5:41 pm | Reply

    I am married to a Brit and just last week, I was talking about 쌍꺼풀 with my sister s(how so many Asians are getting it done). My husband wanted to know what we were talking about so I told him what 쌍꺼풀 was. He didn’t understand so I told him to look at my eyes (I have one naturally) and then look at both my sisters eyes (they don’t have any). He didn’t have any clue what I was talking about. My one sister had to point, explain and re-explain and he honestly didn’t see what we were referring to. I had to keep closing and re-opening (as did my sisters) to get him to see the difference. My 쌍꺼풀 is very prominent and hard to miss to I learned something from this experience. Men, not only can’t they tell when I’ve gotten a hair cut, whether I’m wearing make up that day or not, they can’t tell if I have 쌍꺼풀! Or, is it just my husband and my sisters’ husbands?

  • Amyable // March 16, 2008 at 5:50 pm | Reply

    On the topic of Lasik – I got it done many years ago (I think around 1998-99) with a doctor that my neighbor used. She did extensive research and decided on him while I just took her word for it. Looking back, that was very foolish of me not to have done any research myself. I’m rather type A so why I was lazy on that point, I’m not sure. Anyway, my eye sight was horrible prior to Lasik. I was literally blind without contact/glasses. He told me during consult that I will most likely need “enhancement” in my left eye because of the amount of correction required. I came out of the surgery seeing 20/15 in both eyes. Within one year, my left eye went down to 20/40 or 20/50 so I did do the enhancement. I did have the dry eyes and halos at night for about a year after each surgery though. Luckily for me, they weren’t bothersome enough for me to regret the surgeries and they weren’t permanent. On another note, when I went into do that enhancement on my left eye, I could have done it on my right eye since it was now seeing at 20/30 but the doctor said that we should leave it alone. He said that it would stave off me needing reading glasses a bit longer. That has now come true. I am 20/20 when using both eyes even though my left is 20/15 and right is 20/30-35. Because of the undercorrection in my right eye, my optometrist says that I am pushing off my need for reading glasses! Yeah!

    Despite all this success, I don’t recommend Lasik to anyone. I know there are individual differences in outcome so it is a very personal decision.

  • suddenly susan // March 16, 2008 at 11:44 pm | Reply

    JY~
    i think it’s funny how korean parents think, “my daughter can’t get married because she doesn’t have an extra fold in her eyelid.” remind them that there are plenty of korean women with 쌍꺼풀 who are still single. i have a feeling that even if you did get the 쌍꺼풀 surgery, they’d get on your case to change something else–go to church, buy new clothes are two favorite ones.

    amyable~
    my friend told me about the summer she went to korea and got 쌍꺼풀 surgery. she went back to her american high school in the fall and all her non-asian friends were like, “did you get a haircut?” or “did you get your teeth whitened?” …”cuz there’s something different about you.” while her asian friends were able to call her on it right away.

    and thanks for your honesty about the lasik. you’re the first person i’ve met who’s had it done and isn’t trying to convert others like it’s a religion. one time i visited a swank boutique in the meat packing district and the way the saleswoman was pushing her lasik doctor on me you’d figure she was getting a kickback!

  • Anonymous // March 17, 2008 at 7:20 am | Reply

    There’s a new surgery that’s much safer involving inserting a lens inside the eye. it’s safer because it can be reversed and upgraded as needed. cornea reshaping (pkr) as you may well be aware was initially started in good o’ USSR i think in the 60’s. it’s been refined with better equipment (eximer laser replacing steel blade and computer guided tracking systems replacing surgically trained hands. )

    i didn’t know they have dimple surgery….how vain is that?! heck i don’t think dimples make a pretty face. who cares about the stupid dimple. i think it’s been scientifically proven that big doe eyes are a definite attractive feature on females because it harkens back to large ocular to face proportions found in a baby. i’ve also heard that breasts are attractive to men because they resemble the caboose or vise versa.

    as far as cosmetic surgery goes, in general, I have two thoughts on this. Doesn’t the gov’t of korea encourage women to get cs? I think there is some virtue to this. after all look at sweden a nation known for good looks. if the general population of a nation’s appearance improves, it naturally increases a nations prestige i think. you may think this trivial but who wants to be known as an ugly nation? now obviously no one should be subjected to the knife if they don’t want to.

    but having said that, living in an age of girl power, I don’t see a need or desire in part of some women to get married which negates the need to look pretty. Who can blame them. Who wants to be in a situation where they have to shoot out a baby? who wants to put up with sharing living quarters with someone else let alone a male if they don’t need to? who wants to play a role of housekeeper? who wants to do any of these things when there are other things to do. after all women no longer need to rely on men for income or survival. In fact I’d say the tide has turned, men are in need of women. so i guess what i’m trying to say is that less women being interested in marriage is i think a trend that’s only bound to grow. simply put, women don’t need men anymore for money or sex/procreation. it’s the men who need women. I do believe that men’s sex drives are on the average exponentially greater then women’s. heck you can ask any average guy if they had the choice between food vs sex…sex would be the choice more times than not. but that’s here nor there. i guess what i’m trying to say is women’s stock in our society is greater right now then men’s because they control the gates to heaven.

  • anon // March 18, 2008 at 12:07 pm | Reply

    interesting blog. although i think cosmetic surgery and lasik have a fundamental difference: one is to see better while the other is to look better. i fail to see why this is the same. check out this disscussion here:

    http://edition.cnn.com/CNN/Programs/larry.king.live/

  • Jae Young // March 20, 2008 at 3:49 am | Reply

    No worries, Susan, this girl is not getting anything done, except maybe dimples, and anon, I just think dimples are cute, this is an individual opinion on what I find aesthetically pleasing. I’m not saying that I think I am somehow lacking and less of a person because I don’t have dimples. I just think they’re cute.

    The problem is not plastic surgery but the motivation for seeking it out, gendered notions of attractiveness, the self-esteem that is waaay too closely tied to appearance amongst women, etc. It seems a little two faced to be okay with say hair dye and coloured contacts but not with nose jobs. (Society, not any of y’all, I mean. I don’t know who’s okay with what here, after all.)

    Of course there is a fairly large difference between Lasik and cosmetic surgery but I merely bring up cosmetic surgery because I think surgery is becoming normalized on a grand scale and that is problematic. Besides, I’m Korean, hello, of COURSE I am going to bring up cosmetic surgery.

  • suddenly susan // March 20, 2008 at 8:22 pm | Reply

    i’m a little torn about cosmetic surgery. on the one hand, sure, people should be able to do what they want to their bodies. why shouldn’t ashlee simpson get the nose she always wanted or kelly rowland get the boobs to fill out those godawful house of dereon dresses? go ahead, knock yourselves out. really, wadda i care?

    then on the other hand, i hear of low-income women spending their life’s savings on lipo or some other painful procedure — or worse yet, a web site where men donate money to women so they can have boob jobs — and i think wtf is wrong with these people?

    but you’re right, cosmetic surgery is becoming normalized. it makes me a little sad to think that we as a society have become so superficial; and that despite the great number of beautiful women i see in all forms, for some, the definition of beauty is still impossibly narrow.

  • Anonymous // March 21, 2008 at 1:31 pm | Reply

    attractive people have higher salaries. one thing i could never figure out is why do people treat beautiful people better than ugly people? is it because deep inside they think they can get some? men always go out of their way to be nice and accomodating to pretty females. i think it’s because they seriously think they have a shot at them…no matter how small that chance may be.
    why else?

    as for me, i think in females, pretty body goes only so far. if i had a choice between a person with pretty body vs pretty face, i’d pick pretty face.

    susan and jae young, you got to remember sometimes it’s the nonphysical qualities that are the most attractive and lasting in people. (you got to figure in any committed relationship, after a while the sex will get old and it’ll be the interests and connections that sustain the relationship.) that’s why females are attracted to some men who are not lookers. i mean look at gordon ramsay…with all those wrinkles!

    above all, even if you’re an ave looking female…smart and caring is sooooooooooo sexy!

    us mongoloid featured asians are at a disadvantage because we are living under western notions of beauty that hold anglo features at a premium. unless us koreans can do a face transplant, we ain’t ever going to reach that perfect ideal. i say screw the big boob, tall nose, big eye, puffy lip, lipo’ed look. love that round youthful moon face sista! there’s virtue to having small slit eyes and small flattened noses. yellow is beautiful.

  • Anonymous // March 21, 2008 at 1:35 pm | Reply

    susan, have you ever made jja jong myun in the kitchen? if so, i’d like to hear your recipe. I’ve been researching some recipes online and youtube…they all look disgusting. I’m wanting to find an authentic recipe that’s used in restaurants in korea. any suggestions?

    i’m craving jja jong myun. :-( (

    5 years since my last rapturous jja jong myun meal.

  • G // March 24, 2008 at 3:54 pm | Reply

    I have to say…I got LASIK done about 8 years ago, and I absolutely loved it! It was life-changing. However, my eyes have gone down, and I need to get it done again…you never know how it’s going to come out.

  • suddenly susan // March 24, 2008 at 3:56 pm | Reply

    did you have dry eye and the halo effect?

  • G // March 24, 2008 at 6:45 pm | Reply

    Yes, but it only lasted about two months, and it wasn’t major. It didn’t get in my way at all. I guess I had a good experience; unfortunately, LASIK only lasts so long.

  • Anonymous // March 28, 2008 at 8:31 am | Reply

    susan,

    can you get me a ja jong myon recipe?

  • suddenly susan // March 28, 2008 at 11:41 pm | Reply

    i’ve yet to try a homemade jja jang myun that tasted as good as what you get in a restaurant. i think that’s because home cooks could never in good conscience add that much pork fat/grease.

    you might do a search on google or youtube for recipes.

  • sierra // December 11, 2008 at 10:13 pm | Reply

    I’d go for eyelid surgery if I wasn’t so afraid… but only to correct my ‘fake’ double-eyelid. I have some sort of cysts under my eyelid that is causing the illusion of the double-eyelid… I asked the doctor to remove them but he refused to because he thinks that they are harmless T_T Putting on eye makeup is a pain when you have uneven eyes.

    I always said that I’d be happy with single eyelids as long as they’re symmetrical. But I think if I wasn’t such a chicken, I’d make them double :P

  • suddenly susan // December 14, 2008 at 12:07 am | Reply

    my double eyelids are mismatched, too!

  • Kyle // January 26, 2009 at 2:58 pm | Reply

    If I got Lasik surgery, it’d be because contacts and glasses are just a huge pain in the ass to me. Glasses have always hurt my eyes and distorted my vision, contacts have always made me itchy-eyed and never really cleared everything up for me.

    Either way, I’m not going with anything like this until the success rate and vision restoration is 100%. I’m a photographer and my sight is literally the most important thing that I have. I’m sorry you had problems with your surgery.

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