LASIK
LASIK is a more complex procedure than PRK. It is
performed for all degrees of nearsightedness. The
surgeon uses a knife called a microkeratome to cut
a flap of corneal tissue, removes the targeted tissue
beneath it with the laser, and then replaces the flap.
"With LASIK, the skill of the surgeon is important
because he'll be making an incision," says Stephen
Crawford, O.D., an optometrist practicing in Virginia,
"compared to the PRK method where the machine
does more of the work." Crawford urges people
to find qualified, experienced doctors to perform
this surgery. "You'll want someone who's done
a number of LASIK procedures since this is a surgeon-dependent
operation," he said.
According to Ken Taylor, O.D., vice president of Arthur
D. Little, Inc., a technology and management consultant
firm in Cambridge, Mass., "Last year, across
the country, 40 to 45 percent of refractive surgeries
performed by physicians were LASIK, which equates
to approximately 80,000 procedures." Doctors
not participating in clinical trials may choose to
use the approved laser to perform LASIK procedures
at their discretion, says Morris Waxler, Ph.D., chief
of FDA's diagnostic and surgical devices section.
But most uses are considered "off label"
and are not regulated by FDA.
Ralph A. Rosenthal, M.D., director of FDA's division
of ophthalmic devices, says, "The agency has
ruled that individual physicians can perform LASIK
under the general 'practice of medicine,' if it's
in the patient's best interest."
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