What
is LASIK?
The eye and vision errors
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: 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. Glasses or contact lenses are designed to compensate for the eye's imperfections.
Surgical procedures aimed at improving the focusing power of the eye are called refractive surgery. In LASIK surgery, precise
and controlled removal of corneal tissue by a special laser reshapes the cornea changing its focusing power.
Other types of refractive surgery
Radial Keratotomy or RK and Photorefractive Keratectomy or PRK
are other refractive surgeries used to reshape the cornea. In RK, a very sharp knife is used to cut slits in the cornea changing
its shape. PRK was the first surgical procedure developed to reshape the cornea, by sculpting, using a laser. Later, LASIK
was developed. The same type of laser is used for LASIK and PRK. Often the exact same laser is used for the two types of surgery.
The major difference between the two surgeries is the way that the stroma, the middle layer of the cornea, is exposed before
it is vaporized with the laser. In PRK, the top layer of the cornea, called the epithelium, is scraped away to expose the
stromal layer underneath. In LASIK, a flap is cut in the stromal layer and the flap is folded back.
Another type of refractive surgery is thermokeratoplasty
in which heat is used to reshape the cornea. The source of the heat can be a laser, but it is a different kind of laser than
is used for LASIK and PRK. Other refractive devices include corneal ring segments that are inserted into the stroma and special
contact lenses that temporarily reshape the cornea (orthokeratology).
What the FDA regulates
In
the United States, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulates the sale of medical devices such as the lasers used for
LASIK. Before a medical device can be legally sold in the U.S., the person or company that wants
to sell the device must seek approval from the FDA. To gain approval, they must present evidence that the device is reasonably
safe and effective for a particular use, the "indication." Once the FDA has approved a medical device, a doctor may decide
to use that device for other indications if the doctor feels it is in the best interest of a patient. The use of an approved
device for other than its FDA-approved indication is called "off-label use." The FDA does not regulate the practice of medicine.
The FDA does not have the authority to:
- Regulate a doctor's practice. In other words,
FDA does not tell doctors what to do when running their business or what they can or cannot tell their patients.
- Set the amount a doctor can charge for LASIK eye
surgery.
- "Insist" the patient information booklet from the
laser manufacturer be provided to the potential patient.
- Make recommendations for individual doctors, clinics,
or eye centers. FDA does not maintain nor have access to any such list of doctors performing LASIK eye surgery.
- Conduct or provide a rating system on any medical
device it regulates.
The first refractive laser systems approved by FDA
were excimer lasers for use in PRK to treat myopia and later to treat astigmatism. However, doctors began using these lasers
for LASIK (not just PRK), and to treat other refractive errors (not just myopia). Over the last several years, LASIK has become
the main surgery doctors use to treat myopia in the United States.
More recently, some laser manufacturers have gained FDA approval for laser systems for LASIK to treat myopia, hyperopia and
astigmatism and for PRK to treat hyperopia and astigmatism.