Vision Improvement

Correcting or Improving Vision Problems

Lenses for correcting or improving vision:
There are two types of lenses prescribed for correcting or improving vision. These include:

  • Eyeglasses
    Eyeglasses, the most common form of eyewear used to correct or improve nearly all types of vision problems, are a frame that holds two pieces of glass or plastic, which have been ground into lenses to correct refractive errors. Eyeglasses perform this function by adding or subtracting focusing power to your cornea and lens. Measured in diopters, this measurement (also known as your eyeglass prescription) reflects the amount of power necessary to focus images directly on to the retina.
  • Contact lenses
    Contact lenses, which are worn directly on the cornea of the eye, are available for the correction of nearly all vision problems. Like eyeglasses, contact lenses help to correct refractive errors and perform this function by adding or subtracting focusing power to your cornea and lens. Measured in diopters, this measurement (also known as your contact lens prescription) reflects the amount of power necessary to focus images directly on to the retina. However, unlike eyeglass prescriptions, by federal law, eye care specialists are not required to give you a copy of your contact lens specifications until you have been fitted and seen for follow up examinations. Although, many eye care specialists will give you a copy if you request one.

Types of contact lenses include:

  • rigid gas permeable
  • soft planned replacement
  • soft disposable
  • colored lenses to change or enhance eye color.

These lenses can correct nearsightedness, farsightedness, astigmatism and presbyopia.

About 24 million Americans wear contact lenses, with soft lenses accounting for 85 percent.

Vision Surgery Surgery for correcting or improving vision:
There are several types of surgery available for correcting or improving vision. The goal of treatment is to reduce or eliminate an individual's dependence on the use of eyeglasses or contact lens. Corrective surgical procedures include:

  • LASIK/ laser in-situ keratomileusis
    This is a procedure in which a surgical plane is established with a microkeratome and an ultraviolet laser is used to remove a thin layer of tissue from the center of the cornea, thus reshaping the cornea and correcting or reducing moderate to high levels of myopia. Hyperopia can also be treated.
  • RK/ radial keratotomy
    This is a surgical procedure to improve myopia (nearsightedness), in which microscopic, radial incisions (keratotomies) are made in the cornea to change the curvature of the cornea, thus correcting light refraction.
  • AK/ astigmatic keratotomy
    This procedure is often performed to reduce astigmatism (a condition in which the cornea is not symmetrical). Unlike the radial keratotomy, the incisions involved in AK are made in a curved, rather than radial, pattern.
  • ALK/ automated lamellar keratoplasty
    This surgical procedure has been shown to be effective in reducing high levels of myopia and hyperopia (farsightedness) by slicing across the cornea at different levels (depending upon which condition is being treated) with an instrument called a microkeratome (surgical knife).
  • PRK/ photorefractive keratectomy
    This is a procedure in which an excimer laser is used to reshape the cornea to improve or correct mild to moderate myopia.

Last Modified On: 07/31/2007