Rushie
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Rushie
I'd like any feedback from everyone who has had cataract surgery. I finally went to the surgeon and am about to schedule it but want to be sure I'm doing the right thing.
I am nearsighted in both eyes, but only have a cataract in one eye. The other is clear, may never get one, may get one in the future.
So in deciding what lens to put in the bad eye, here are the options given by the doctor:
1.) Lens for distance. That way I will have "monovision" and need no glasses. The new lens eye will have distance vision and the other eye will have near vision like it does now because we will do nothing to it. In the future if the other eye gets a cataract, I can then decide whether to have it corrected for distance also, then need cheaters for close up, or put a near lens in that eye, and continue to have monovision. For me personally, cheaters for close is NOT AN OPTION. So I would have to go with a near focus lens if the other eye ever needs one, and I will be committing to monovision forever with this option.
2.) Lens for near. He will attempt to equate the focal distance to my other eye so they will be relatively equally corrected. That way I will need glasses for distance but unlike now, the lenses will be equally thick (right now they are many diopters apart). In the future if I get a cataract in the other eye, at that point I will have the option of putting a distance lens in that eye, and hence will have monovision from that point on, but then will not need glasses for anything.
I am going to go with option 2 because I am unsure about monovision. Don't know if I will like it and also it's an FAA certification problem if I ever go back to flying.
This doctor says for patients like me, he does recommend option 2. By patients like me, he means those who spend most of their time doing reading or close work and who adamantly do not want to wear glasses for close up. Also, since I've been wearing glasses for distance since I was a teen, it's not like they will bother me.
He also does not recommend any of the newfangled multiple focusing or torrid whatever they are called lenses. He says the standard tried and true has the greatest chance of making me happy. I agree.
He says he usually puts the focus about 1/3 meter. That's pretty much what my other eye is at. (The cataract eye is currently about 4 inches LOLZ!)
Here is my biggest question. Any of you had the new lens for closeup? If so, is the image sharp at exactly 1/3 meter and too blurry a little farther or closer, or do you find the image comfortably acceptable over a variation from that exact distance? Like can you read the airplane panel without additional lenses? 1/3 meter seems short (it's holding a book up) and things like reading products on a grocery shelf or looking at a computer screen while sitting back in your chair, is a bit farther than that.
I am nearsighted in both eyes, but only have a cataract in one eye. The other is clear, may never get one, may get one in the future.
So in deciding what lens to put in the bad eye, here are the options given by the doctor:
1.) Lens for distance. That way I will have "monovision" and need no glasses. The new lens eye will have distance vision and the other eye will have near vision like it does now because we will do nothing to it. In the future if the other eye gets a cataract, I can then decide whether to have it corrected for distance also, then need cheaters for close up, or put a near lens in that eye, and continue to have monovision. For me personally, cheaters for close is NOT AN OPTION. So I would have to go with a near focus lens if the other eye ever needs one, and I will be committing to monovision forever with this option.
2.) Lens for near. He will attempt to equate the focal distance to my other eye so they will be relatively equally corrected. That way I will need glasses for distance but unlike now, the lenses will be equally thick (right now they are many diopters apart). In the future if I get a cataract in the other eye, at that point I will have the option of putting a distance lens in that eye, and hence will have monovision from that point on, but then will not need glasses for anything.
I am going to go with option 2 because I am unsure about monovision. Don't know if I will like it and also it's an FAA certification problem if I ever go back to flying.
This doctor says for patients like me, he does recommend option 2. By patients like me, he means those who spend most of their time doing reading or close work and who adamantly do not want to wear glasses for close up. Also, since I've been wearing glasses for distance since I was a teen, it's not like they will bother me.
He also does not recommend any of the newfangled multiple focusing or torrid whatever they are called lenses. He says the standard tried and true has the greatest chance of making me happy. I agree.
He says he usually puts the focus about 1/3 meter. That's pretty much what my other eye is at. (The cataract eye is currently about 4 inches LOLZ!)
Here is my biggest question. Any of you had the new lens for closeup? If so, is the image sharp at exactly 1/3 meter and too blurry a little farther or closer, or do you find the image comfortably acceptable over a variation from that exact distance? Like can you read the airplane panel without additional lenses? 1/3 meter seems short (it's holding a book up) and things like reading products on a grocery shelf or looking at a computer screen while sitting back in your chair, is a bit farther than that.