Laser Eye Surgery: In Detail

by mapgirl on January 22, 2008

All was successful with my surgery last week. There were only two problems, but not huge ones. Since I changed jobs, I don’t have an insurance card yet, so I’ve paid for all of meds out-of-pocket. That’s not the problem though, and I’ll explain why.

First of all, I told the nurses, technicians, and doctors that I am allergic to Cipro. Yes, I am going to die in an anthrax attack. But really, it will be quick and painless relative to having hives cover my body, because I found out the hard way about my allergy. This meant that I could not use Zymar, the regular antibiotic they give patients, as it is in the same class. I wish they discovered this error before I spent $75 on the Zymar. However, the replacement, Tobramax was only $18 and I was able to return the Zymar, unopened, for a full refund! YAY!

Advice: If you are doing this on a budget and are not insured, you should ask your doctor if Tobramax is a suitable alternative for you because of its reduced cost. Your doctor may write you a prescription for it instead. Heck, they might even give you free sample sizes. (Which I will explain later.)

Second, everything was going lousy on Thursday for me. I had to rearrange my schedule due to different constraints with work (meeting my new project team at an off-site location far from my doctor’s office) and then the horrible snowy weather we had. I was running late big time, but since the weather was crappy, the laser eye center didn’t think anything of it when I showed up 10 minutes late.

I put the surgery on my credit card as I have not yet received a Medical FSA card yet. (Did you know this has been renamed in 2008? It’s now called Healthcare FSA instead.) It’s going to ding my credit score as I will now have a high utilization, but I don’t care. I had to do it, and reimbursement papers will be submitted soon, as I will have to ask for reimbursement for the surgery (approximately $4800) and for all the medications (approximately $50-60).

One thing I forgot about is a valium pill. They offer it to you. I remember they mentioned it to me a few weeks ago and I thought I didn’t want it. Benzodiazapams suck. I hate how groggy valium makes me feel. But this time, being all tense about driving in bad weather, being late, and a small amount of anxiety about permanently jacking up my vision, I said ok. I advise you to only take half, because I was really woozy for a whole day. I’ll explain more about this too.

Right before going into the laser room, my doctor did a quick check of my eyes. He looked at my right eye and said it was great, but when he looked at my left he was concerned that my eye socket was a bit small. He was thinking that he might have to do PRK instead and explained that with Lasik, they fit a ring on your eye socket and it couples with the laser to create a tight seal and fix the laser’s position. Unfortunately, my eye socket might be too small to fit the ring and it could pop out, which would be very bad. So I signed paperwork for PRK surgery as well as the Lasik and away I went into the laser room.

Lasik takes about 2 minutes. No lie. It’s very quick. They fit the ring on, you stare at an orange blinky light, stuff is very blurry and you can see the doctor manipulate stuff in front of your eyeball. It’s not a big deal. The doctor was able to do my right eye very quickly. However, sure enough, when it came to my left eye, they put the ring on and as the laser lowered to couple to the ring, it popped out. The doctor apologized and went ahead with PRK instead. The difference is basically rather than cut a flap, they scrape away the epithelial cells. It takes a lot longer to heal, bu the results will essentially be the same. Honestly, it only took a few minutes more. I couldn’t have been in the laser room more than 10 minutes total. And that includes another post-op check of my eyes.

With the PRK, they also put a protective bandage contact lens in, which isn’t necessary with Lasik.

Because they want you to sleep for a few hours right away, they give me Tylenol PM after they reviewed my PRK and Lasik healing/medication treatments, because there are different medications for each one. And they wrote me some extra prescriptions for pain medications. Before my friend took me home, we went to the drugstore and I picked up the meds along with some extra eye drops. With eye surgery you have to get single-use preservative-free drops. Total for two prescriptions and eye drops was about $40. Really, it was cheaper than I thought. Also, they give me two small vials of Tobramax for my PRK eye, not knowing that I already have some anyway due to the Cipro allergy. So more free medication for me!

On our way back to my friend’s house, we decide that I am going to sleep over for a few hours and her husband will drive me back later because the weather is going to change to rain and the roads might be better. If not, I’ll just stay over. I crawled into their spare bedroom and conk out. I slept from 4pm till MIDNIGHT! I could hear voices downstairs wondering if they should check on me, but I’m way too tired from the Tylenol PM and valium to even shout out that I’m ok. Basically, I roll over and sleep till midnight. At that point, I wake up and crawl downstairs for a glass of water, slice of pizza and slice of cheesecake. I put in my first round of eye drops and go back to sleep.

In the morning, I do all of my eye drops at 8am and take the oral medication I need as well. I take a nap and get up around 10:30 for the next round of drops. With Lasik, you put in Pred Forte every 2 hours you are awake (a medication my doctor provided). Due to an anti-inflammatory drop for the PRK that’s every 12 hours (also provided), I try to set myself onto an even hour schedule for everything. I line up the drugs in order in front of each eye and treat the right eye first, then the left eye. They recommend doing each eye separately so you don’t get confused. I recommend lining the drops up on the counter in order, so you don’t lose your place.

The funny thing is that the lubricating drop has to be chilled for the PRK eye. I ask my doctor about this later and it’s just for comfort. I think this is crazy to put in an ice-cold eye drop, but it really does help lower the inflammation, so I am going to continue to do it.

Later in the day I go to see my regular eye doctor and I made a stupid mistake of not bringing all the meds and treatment plans with me. Due to the confusion about Tobramax, the doctor calls the laser center and gets it all straightened out. It’s all good and I am cleared to drive. I see 20/20 out of my Lasik eye, and 20/50 out of my PRK eye. This after a mere 24 hours. WOW. That is really cool.

The eye doctor tells me that my Lasik eye will be fully healed in about a week, but cautions me that the PRK eye can take up to 2-3 months to heal and settle into its final prescription. It may or may not reach 20/20. I tell her that’s ok. She says though it’s 20/50 now, when I come back in 3 days, she will remove the bandage contact for me and my vision will improve even further.

I still feel woozy from the valium and Tylenol PM. I continue to drink a lot of water to metabolize the medication. But I’m also having a low grade headache. The doctor asks me if I have any pain and I tell her not really. I only had a regular Tylenol even though I have a prescription for Tylenol 3. I just don’t need it since there is no acute pain.

Now that I’m writing this in my funky, don’t-rub-your-eyes, goggles, I realize that I still have a low grade headache and I’m sure it’s due to a slight amount of squinting from my 20/50 eye and this stupid elastic strap on the goggles.

But all in all, I’m happy I’ve done it. Feel free to comment or email me any questions you might have. I’m not a medical professional by any means, but I did have two types of procedures and they were both successful. Even if my PRK eye stays at 20/50, I have made great improvements already. If you have a desire to get rid of your glasses, I highly recommend laser surgery and I am happy to recommend my surgeon to you. (I get a $25 gas card if you do.) Also, to save money, I recommend asking your friends if they have referral coupons for other doctors. Apparently some of the laser centers around DC give them to patients, I just chose a specific surgeon who had done work on several of my friends and I felt extremely confident about getting good care. More than anything, be confident in your doctor when selecting your surgeon. Though the preliminary checks were done by a doctor that didn’t notice my Cipro allergy, as they reviewed my chart later, they caught the error and called right away. Better late than never.

Also, Lulugal has a write up of her own experiences at How I Save Money. Take a look and compare and contrast. Talk to as many folks as you can about the details since everyone has a different take on things. (And her treatment protocol is very different from mine. The meds aren’t even the same name, which makes me wonder if she’s in a different country and they’re branded differently.)

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{ 12 comments… read them below or add one }

lulugal11 January 22, 2008 at 10:09 am

Girrrrrrrrrrrrl I am in Texas. Got my LASIK done in Plano with Dr. Boothe.

Thank you for mentioning my articles along with yours.

I was really surprised to see that your meds were different from mine. I did not have to take any oral meds except for the painkiller/relaxant they gave me pre-op.

Was it cold in your room too? My op room was freezing and that was the most uncomfortable part of the thing for me.

My vision was 20/15 at my last post op visit and I have to go back next week for another check up.

But hey we can see now!!!!!

HC January 22, 2008 at 10:52 am

This is an AWESOME writeup.

I am going to save this one for a few years from now when I can afford to do it.

HC January 22, 2008 at 10:52 am

Oh, and of course, congratulations on everything going so well!

Mrs. Micah January 22, 2008 at 11:28 am

That was both fascinating and cringe-worthy. I’m very sensitive about my eyes but yay for the Lasik at least being quick and quick to heal. The other scares me.

It’s really cool to know more about the procedure…it’s always been a mystery to me.

If your one eye stays at 20/50 that’s about what I have and it’s no biggie at all. :)

SMB January 22, 2008 at 3:00 pm

Oh! I just remembered one little funny detail about my surgery–they gave me a stuffed dog to hold during the surgery. I thought that was kind of funny.

You didn’t mention a burning smell–not that you missed anything… ;)

Glad it went well and I’m sure you’ll be pleased!

sjean January 22, 2008 at 4:11 pm

I want lasik someday. My eye doctor recommends that I wait until i’m done having kids (or until I know i won’t have them) as that can change your vision. other than that, I have very little doubts that I’ll do it someday.

Sistah Ant January 22, 2008 at 8:34 pm

thanks for that – i’ve been thinking about surgery for my eyes one day when i can afford it, and i learned something from reading this.

livingalmostlarge January 22, 2008 at 9:44 pm

I have heard and consulted the doctor I was interested in performing the surgery that pregnancy can change your eye sight and affect the results. What was your doctor’s thoughts on that?

I had to wait for my vision to stabilize. Now I’m debating waiting until after kids. Please let me know, I really want more opinions.

Vixen January 22, 2008 at 10:22 pm

I’m allergic to Cipro too!

lulugal11 January 23, 2008 at 1:19 pm

Hey Mapgirl can you change the link you have to my homepage to be a direct link to one of my posts on the LASIK? I currently have four posts up but if you can link to the first one that would be nice.
Thanks,
LA

Emily January 24, 2008 at 6:09 pm

Hi, first time poster.

I had vision correction surgery same day as you – but not LASIK. My myopia was too severe for Lasik. So I had an ICL (implantable collamer lens) implant instead. I was under anesthesia, so there was no discomfort from the procedure itself. The one thing I remember is that immediately waking up from anesthesia, I could see, and see quite clearly, even with the bandage on my right eye. I went to see the doctor the next day, and I was already seeing 20/20. My eyedrop routine is a lot less complicated than yours too. Be glad you got Lasik though, the ICL is more than 2x as expensive because of the surgery. But isn’t it money well spent?

lanea January 25, 2008 at 10:48 am

I like you so much that I managed to read more than half of this eyeball stuff before I wussed out. Congrats on the surgery and I hope your new vision is wonderful.

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