| Epi-LASiK (Epithelial Laser In Situ 
				Keratomileusis) is usually performed as an outpatient 
				procedure using topical anesthesia with eyedrops. Your 
				ophthalmologist (Eye M.D.) uses an alcohol solution to loosen 
				and peel back the epithelium, the outermost layer of the cornea, 
				to expose the corneal tissue beneath it. A cool excimer laser is 
				used to permanently reshape the cornea, and the epithelium is 
				either placed back into position, where it will selfadhere, or 
				is removed completely, in which case the epithelium heals inward 
				from the corneal periphery in just a few days.
 The cornea is a part of the eye that helps focus light to create 
				an image on the retina. It works in much the same way that the 
				lens of a camera focuses light to create an image on film. The 
				bending and focusing of light is also known as refraction. 
				Usually the shape of the cornea and the eye are not perfect and 
				the image on the retina is out-of-focus (blurred) or distorted.
 
 These imperfections in the focusing power of the eye are called refractive 
errors. There are three primary
types of refractive errors: They are myopia, hyperopia and astigmatism. Persons 
with myopia, or
nearsightedness, have more difficulty seeing distant objects as clearly as near 
objects. Persons with
hyperopia, or farsightedness, have more difficulty seeing near objects as 
clearly as distant objects.
Astigmatism is a distortion of the image on the retina caused by irregularities 
in the cornea or lens of
the eye. Combinations of myopia and astigmatism or hyperopia and astigmatism are 
common.
 
 |