Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/02/27
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I had LASER surgery just over a year ago (I was R -7.5/L -6.5 + astigmatism). My right (dominant) eye is now perfect 6/3 vision, the left eye is under corrected to -1 and no astigmatism. This was to do closer distance in later life (I am under 50) but I am thinking to get it distance corrected and have to wear glasses for close work in years to come. It is the outside/distance where I do not want to need glasses..... If you are still -3 that will need correction, so a contact lens in left eye or glasses with the right eye plain? Or LASER to correct to 0 ;-) john > -----Original Message----- > > LUG: I'm going to have cataract surgery in my right (dominant) eye in a couple > of weeks. My left eye is fine. > > I'm told that I will probably have a choice. I can get my right eye corrected for > distance. Or get it corrected to be approximately the same as my left eye, which > currently has a distance prescription of -3.00, no astigmatism. > > Has anyone on the LUG had to make this choice? What did you decide, and how > did it work out for you? > > Background: I've been nearsighted and worn glasses most of my life. I wore > monovision contacts for the past several years. They worked well for general > use during the day--I could see, drive, do casual things on > the computer, read menus, etc. When working extensively at the > computer during the day, I wore a pair of cheap reading glasses from which I'd > removed the left lens, so both my eyes were "set" to computer distance. At > night, I took out the contacts and used regular bifocals or computer glasses. > > This arrangement worked well until the past year, when the cataract's effects > made monovision too much of a compromise. > > The idea of having my right eye perfect for distance appeals to me, as I could do > without glasses a large portion of the time. And (not > incidentally) use a Leica RF without glasses. But this is "for keeps," > so I want to be sure I make the right choice for the right reasons. >