A few tips for high school seniors with myopia

  Every year, more and more students and parents consult and make appointments for myopia surgery near the college entrance exams, and in general the main questions include: 1.  2. What is the best type?  3. Will the surgery after the college entrance exam meet the vision requirements before the physical examination?  4. Are there any complications?  5. Will myopia persist in the future?  I would like to give some brief answers to the above questions for students and their families: 1. Regarding the safety of surgery, although there are risks in any surgery, excimer, femtosecond and ICL surgeries have accumulated a lot of clinical experience and data, which show that these surgeries have high safety. As long as the preoperative examination is accurate, the surgical method is properly selected, the surgeon is experienced, and the postoperative medication is reasonable, the safety is usually guaranteed.  As for which surgery is the best, I would like to tell you that there is no best, only whether it is the most suitable. According to the examination results, doctors will usually inform you which one or several surgical procedures are suitable for you, and what are the advantages and disadvantages of each, for you to choose. It is important to note that some medical institutions may be inclined to recommend high-priced surgery due to performance requirements, so you should be discerning.  3. Usually, the vision of low and medium myopia can be restored to about 80% on the second day after surgery, and the best corrected vision can be achieved 10 days after surgery, ICL is faster, and the recovery of high myopia may be a little slower. Therefore, if the surgery is performed 3-5 days before the medical examination, it is generally not a big problem to pass. Even some patients who are in a hurry can pass the physical examination the day after surgery.  4, if the examination is accurate, the operation is appropriate, the operation is standardized, and the postoperative medication is reasonable, myopia surgery usually does not have serious complications, but of course some patients have a sense of glare, some dryness in the eyes, and slight photophobia after surgery, which can be encountered clinically, and will gradually reduce and adapt over time.  5, about whether there will be myopia should be understood as follows, after surgery from the refractive state in fact has been the same as the normal eye, since the normal eye will be myopic, the eyes after surgery if not standardized eye use may also be myopic again, so after surgery need to be well protected.