LASIK for the correction of Hyperopia

What is Hyperopia?

Hyperopia

In the normal eye, light bends through the cornea and lens to focus on the retina. With hyperopia (farsightedness - place cursor over image) the eye is shorter (or cornea is flatter) causing the focal point of light to be behind the retina. The image is therefore out of focus on the retina and vision is blurred.




The Treatment
Corneal Flap Folded Back Laser of Cornea Corneal Flap Replaced Final Configuration
1. A thin flap of cornea is created and folded back. 2. Excimer laser is applied to reshape (ablate) the cornea. 3. The corneal flap is replaced over the treated cornea. 4. The "steeper" cornea now bends light to become focused on the retina.

 
The Result
Result

Before LASIK treatment, light is out of focus on the retina. After LASIK treatment (place cursor over image), the "steeper" cornea (arrow) causes light to bend in such a way as to become focused on the retina. Vision is clear.



Home | The Surgeon | LASIK for Hyperopia | LASIK for Myopia | LASIK for Astigmatism | PRK
 
Near Vision | STAAR Visian ICL | Accelerated Ortho-K | Custom Wave CLs | New Technology
DSEK - Sutureless Corneal Surgery | Corneal Transplant Surgery | Pricing | Contact Us