I had SMILE in 2019 and it has ruined both my eyes. I am now partially sighted and disabled. I also need glasses more than before. The industry is not regulated and vendors operate with little care for patients. NEVER, EVER allow commercially motivated surgeons touch your healthy eyes. I try to spread my story to help others. Please thumbs up.
@@Peehoo123 I live my life in chronic pain, inability to open both eyes beyond a crack, terrible eyesight even with glasses, I have filamentary kerititus that means i have rough pieces of tissue forming on my corneas that feels like having sawdust in my eyes 24/7.
@mutualinduction7236 You need to read the published research and not the sales pitch from surgeons. Its unregulated, they say what they want. It will take time to understand. Start by obtaining the patient information booklet produced by the laser manufacturer. Usually surgeons avoid issuing this. The bottom line is it is neither safe nor effective. Most ophthalmologists know to avoid the procedure even though they are able to exercise safety.
@@-1-2-1- what happened during your surgery that you had complications? I got SMILE surgery done in 2021 and had an amazing experience and wonderful outcome. I also made sure to find a reputable surgeon who had a lot of experience with this procedure specifically. I'm sorry to hear it didn't go well for you though.
What was your pupil size? And the optical zone used in the surgery? Mine is 7,5mm and OZ would be set to 7mm but I'm having doubts about permanent glares as I have quite large pupils.
I'm over 40 and I'm getting the SMILE Laser surgery next month. I was told that reading up close is not gonna be clear anymore, only distance vision will be clear. So you said that in the beginning reading up close for you wasn't clear and then later on you were able to read up close in clear vision?? If so, how long did that take for you to read clear up close? During my consultation, they told me since I'm over 40, I will need a reading glass for near visual such as reading text or reading a book. I appreciate your reply. :)
I hope you have not done this yet. You are 40 and have prebyopia that will progress very noticabley each year from now. You will loose near vision in an attempt to get far vision. Near vision only gets worse, never improves. They may try to confuse you by claiming the regression will help this, but that is misleading. You will also get HOAs that means a reduction in both near and far vision quality, including more scattered light , haloes, starbursts and poor contrast. Basically a low optical quality cornea. Not to mention all the health issues.
@@nale5539 There are almost endless reasons not to have laser surgery. Most opthalmologists steer clear of it. but on just the benefits, unless instructed by you the surgeon will aim for 0 to minus0.5D. The variance is generally over plus minus 0.5D. Similar story with astigmatism. That means if you cannot tolerate an error of say -0.75D with say 0.5D astigmatism, and a differnt perscription for the other eye, you will need glasses. You can "try" a realstic laser outcome by going to the optom and trying -0.75D and say 0.5D astig. Also, many surgeons avoid providing the patient information booklet issued by Carl Zeiss. This is a booklet that the SMILE laser machine manufacturer publishes to help inform the patient. Unfortunately surgeons routinely avoid issuing it to the patient. If you need it I can send it to you.
@nale5539 don't do any correction I'm 41 and i did trans prk i wish if i sticked with my glasses believe me you don't want to miss with your near sight even my eyes look is changed i had attractive eyes after correction they shrinked and became red all the time.
at 40 it's almost mal practice for anyone to do this to you. You'd be better off with lens replacement surgery as that will deal with presbyopia as well which will make your vision progressively worse going forward.
You said your near sight wasn’t as good any more, is it because it’s a SMILE surgery and other laser procedures don’t have the same effect on close vision? I got confused. Why you said your close vision wasn’t so good anymore.
For the first two months, I had more eye strain than now. Then I followed this 20-20-20 rule, which helps my eyes relax when I stare at computer screens for too long. 20-20-20 rule: Every 20 minutes, take a 20-second break and focus your eyes on something at least 20 feet away (opto.ca/health-library/the-20-20-20-rule). I don't feel the need for this exercise precisely every 20 minutes, but once in a while, I try it when my eyes feel tired. Also, having a good light setup in my work environment helps me decrease eye fatigue.
It only lasts around 5years as regression is typically -0.11D per year. It's a terrible amount of damage to your corneas for just a few years of not glasses. I needed glasses after 9months.
@@nicoleverhasselt8891 THe surgeon will aim for more hyperopia the younger you are. As the older you are the less accomodation you have. THerefore more likley to complain about loss of short sight. So, yes the older you are the less benefit there is. Again surgeon do not tell you this. They need sales and no complaints within the first year only.
@@-1-2-1-2 years after smile, I'm 22 yo and i feel slow regression whole this time which is super annoying. I just regret i was stupid thinking the best recent eye surgery will replace lenses and glasses. And yeah, i still see holo effect and studd
Sorry mate but don't make these baseless claims trying to scare people on here. I had my surgery yesterday and it's such a relief to see my eyes improve so quickly. Of course I am aware I may have a light recovery compared to others, but posting these horror stories (and not making people inform themselves through reputable sources) is quite appalling. There are always risks in every form of surgery and your surgeon/hospital informs you about the (minimal) chance of these, if not you've seen a quaker. And it's normal that from 40 years onwards, you might need reading glasses as your eye ages like any other. My experience has been nothing but positive😊
@@maar73n79Are you a promotor/marketeer? If you are a real patient who did your surgery? Baseless?? I have two barely functional eyes. My surgeon has several clinical negligence cases against him for the lives he has destroyed as do many of the active surgeons. But the economics still favour those who choose to do this to unsuspecting patients. From your stance it's pretty clear you were not handed the laser manufacturers patient information booklet that shows just a snippet of the appalling stats of SMILE. You would have to be mad to go ahead if you were aware of the real world results. If you can see anywhere near normal consider yourself extremely lucky.
Thanks for the video, but i have a question for you, you mentioned that you had problem with near vision , so when did it becomes clear again after the surgery?
It was really good after 1-2 months. Few days isn’t much, so I’d wait a bit and not worry. But of course I’m not a doctor, so, if you think it’s really bad, talk with your surgeon
@@e.s.180 I think after 1-2 months, there’s no special improvement. I had yearly check recently and one of my eyes actually were under done. Even though surgeon said it was overdone at first, and it will improve over time, it didn’t. So I will go to correction for that eye.
I just got my surgery and need to know if one eye being worse than the other post operation is normal? I can't really see out of one eye right now but the other is fine
I just had SMILE a week ago and I absolutely hate it. Everything is hazy, lights are glowing all the time, cant see up close or far away. Hate it. Wish I would have done Lasik or not at all
@@sarahyy.yy_3 1 month after surgery and my vision is ok, I can do everything without glasses (work on pc, sport, night driving) I have a very little bit of myopia but it can increase, and sometimes I have halos around illuminated objects (like a slightly dirty photograph), because cornea isn’t perfect yet. It will improve in the next 5 months
How long was your vision blurry looking at computers? It’s been 14 weeks for me post smile and my vision is sometimes blurry when looking at computers - but good for long distance most of the time. My surgeon said he overcorrected my vision and my brain hadn’t adjusted yet, but 14 weeks seems like a while…
My blurry vision with computers lasted around 2 months. Later, it got better and better. I had talked about it to my surgeon, and he also told me the same thing that he over corrected.
I have my SMILE surgery booked in a month, but have second thoughts, with over-corrections being one of the issues I'm afraid of. I work on the computer and want to have stable vision close-up. Was the over-correction intentional?
@@twisteddiana at least, my doctor said it was intentional (don’t know why). But I haven’t had any issues with that anymore so far. I can see the close up or far without a problem.
@@twisteddiana Overcorrections are important, because higher order aberrations after surgery (bad night, display and double vision) needs to flatten out by stroma regrow. When your eye is healthy, your stroma will regrow until your vision is clear. This can result to nearsightness, when your vision would be exactly 0 post operative. At very long periods, your eye would become nearsighted until your vision is clear (but only when your eye has healthy ceratocytes). For example when you read a lot and you are young (until 40), your retina triggers regrow of your cornea stroma until the light is focused to a single point, but this needs time, because slow turnover of that cells 2 - 3 Years. This is the cause why industrial countries suffer from nearsightness. Its because displays needs clear vision and this triggers regrow of stroma cells until vision is clear, but this process can end up in glasses again.
After how many days after the surgery did you see absolutely clearly? It's been almost 3 weeks since may surgery and vision is still kinda hazy. Is it normal or not😢?
@@jeyjey3355 dont do any activities that dry them out. Get plenty of sleep. Get it monitored by another opthalmologist. THe surgeon will only say its fine even when it not.
2 weeks gone but my vision also hazy in daytime. Also vision is glaring while i use laptop. Light is not stable in one place and it passes near the object so i feel hazy vision in daytime.
Thanks for sharing your experience. Which hospital/clinic did you get your eyes done? Who was your surgeon? I also live in Finland and planning to get same surgery. Thanks in advance
@@NateBabaev Hi, thanks for answering. I’m also considering Eira, went there for the pre checkup. What was your prescription before surgery? Im mostly worried about under/over correction. Were you given any guarantee for what your eyesight would be after surgery?
@@nut941 PLease don't go ahead until you have done your homework. Start by asking for the patient information booklet that they have to give you but only upon request. One surgeon fighting this bad industry says SMILE inflicts more damage to the corneal nerve plexus than lasik. It is a marketing gimmick as people dont like the idea of the large flap.
@@asustufa1515 Yes, Eira around 6 months ago. Everything went well, but I would recommend to visit atleast one more clinic for pre-check. Felt a bit rushed at Eira, but this might be industry standard.
@@missraja6307Opthalmologists avoid the surgery themselves. THat tells you enough. Save your eyes. If you somehow get tempted message me and I will show you the real data and not the marketing.
I could already see clearly after a day. For a week or close sight was problem. Overall, after a month everything goes away except the glaring text sometimes when the contrast is too high. Other than that, it’s been fine.
learn to love glases. Its the only thing that can get you 20:10 vision. You should only expect 20:30 from laser and a significant increase in higher order uncorrectable abborations. Hence the common description of "vaseline vision"
It never clears. I libve my life like a clear bag has been put over my head. COnstant pain. Surgeon says he did a good job but "I should not have expected perfect results"
@@NateBabaev I am suing. It wont get my eyes back. But in reality, most surgeons lie and manipulate for commercial gain. Its because there's no regulation. By in large they get away with near murder. btw, it would be helpful to not "recommend" this surgery as this is the main cause for people getting the surgery. People think they will get the same good outcome. But that only happens 60% of the time. Perhaps consider adding an advisory on the end of your video. I can help you with that if you need info/resources. We don't want any more suicides or ruined lives.
2 weeks gone but my vision also hazy in daytime. Also vision is glaring while i use laptop. Light is not stable in one place and it passes near the object so i feel hazy vision in daytime.
@@sarahyy.yy_3 I had Dreamt with that I was in hospital and doctor stoped my surgery in the sist minut. That what had happened exactly on friday.......he stopped my operation saying me that was dangerios for you and I don't recomended it for you and how they sent you to me. .....CONCLUTION he saved my live and my iyes. This operation is only recomended for people Who have a bite of miopia not alot.
Wavefront lasik is the same surgery as standard lasik and carries the same risks. The only difference is an additional modification to the ablation profile/pattern that attempts to correct aberrations that are higher order than myiopia and (lower order) astigmatism. The damage and trauma and questionable healing is unchanged. So too is the expected loss of vision quality and quantity.
@@-1-2-1- Do you live under this comment section? Every comment I have read you are bullshitting people, just because you are in minority and had unlucky doctor doesn't mean every surgeon is bad nor is there not a single success story. Stop scaring people, just share your experience and fly away
@@mynirsheqeri1535 Hi, I’m still experiencing some starburst effects, but my eyes are gradually improving. However, I’ve noticed that my vision becomes blurry when using my laptop. Also I’m practicing 20 rule. This result after five months operation.
Thanks for the video. It sounds like you had a very successful operation.
I had SMILE in 2019 and it has ruined both my eyes. I am now partially sighted and disabled. I also need glasses more than before. The industry is not regulated and vendors operate with little care for patients. NEVER, EVER allow commercially motivated surgeons touch your healthy eyes. I try to spread my story to help others. Please thumbs up.
Sorry to hear that. There’s many aspects to consider before having SMILE like any other surgery.
Wt happened to u...plz reply
@@Peehoo123 I live my life in chronic pain, inability to open both eyes beyond a crack, terrible eyesight even with glasses, I have filamentary kerititus that means i have rough pieces of tissue forming on my corneas that feels like having sawdust in my eyes 24/7.
@mutualinduction7236 You need to read the published research and not the sales pitch from surgeons. Its unregulated, they say what they want. It will take time to understand. Start by obtaining the patient information booklet produced by the laser manufacturer. Usually surgeons avoid issuing this. The bottom line is it is neither safe nor effective. Most ophthalmologists know to avoid the procedure even though they are able to exercise safety.
@@-1-2-1- what happened during your surgery that you had complications? I got SMILE surgery done in 2021 and had an amazing experience and wonderful outcome. I also made sure to find a reputable surgeon who had a lot of experience with this procedure specifically. I'm sorry to hear it didn't go well for you though.
What was your pupil size? And the optical zone used in the surgery?
Mine is 7,5mm and OZ would be set to 7mm but I'm having doubts about permanent glares as I have quite large pupils.
I'm over 40 and I'm getting the SMILE Laser surgery next month. I was told that reading up close is not gonna be clear anymore, only distance vision will be clear. So you said that in the beginning reading up close for you wasn't clear and then later on you were able to read up close in clear vision?? If so, how long did that take for you to read clear up close? During my consultation, they told me since I'm over 40, I will need a reading glass for near visual such as reading text or reading a book. I appreciate your reply. :)
I hope you have not done this yet. You are 40 and have prebyopia that will progress very noticabley each year from now. You will loose near vision in an attempt to get far vision. Near vision only gets worse, never improves. They may try to confuse you by claiming the regression will help this, but that is misleading. You will also get HOAs that means a reduction in both near and far vision quality, including more scattered light , haloes, starbursts and poor contrast. Basically a low optical quality cornea. Not to mention all the health issues.
How are you right now after surgery? Im 36 and n i am so hesitant
@@nale5539 There are almost endless reasons not to have laser surgery. Most opthalmologists steer clear of it. but on just the benefits, unless instructed by you the surgeon will aim for 0 to minus0.5D. The variance is generally over plus minus 0.5D. Similar story with astigmatism. That means if you cannot tolerate an error of say -0.75D with say 0.5D astigmatism, and a differnt perscription for the other eye, you will need glasses. You can "try" a realstic laser outcome by going to the optom and trying -0.75D and say 0.5D astig. Also, many surgeons avoid providing the patient information booklet issued by Carl Zeiss. This is a booklet that the SMILE laser machine manufacturer publishes to help inform the patient. Unfortunately surgeons routinely avoid issuing it to the patient. If you need it I can send it to you.
@nale5539 don't do any correction I'm 41 and i did trans prk i wish if i sticked with my glasses believe me you don't want to miss with your near sight even my eyes look is changed i had attractive eyes after correction they shrinked and became red all the time.
at 40 it's almost mal practice for anyone to do this to you. You'd be better off with lens replacement surgery as that will deal with presbyopia as well which will make your vision progressively worse going forward.
You said your near sight wasn’t as good any more, is it because it’s a SMILE surgery and other laser procedures don’t have the same effect on close vision? I got confused. Why you said your close vision wasn’t so good anymore.
Nice vid, I might do it too. Have you noticed a change in eye strain / fatigue when working on a computer for a long time?
For the first two months, I had more eye strain than now. Then I followed this 20-20-20 rule, which helps my eyes relax when I stare at computer screens for too long.
20-20-20 rule: Every 20 minutes, take a 20-second break and focus your eyes on something at least 20 feet away (opto.ca/health-library/the-20-20-20-rule). I don't feel the need for this exercise precisely every 20 minutes, but once in a while, I try it when my eyes feel tired.
Also, having a good light setup in my work environment helps me decrease eye fatigue.
@@NateBabaevhow are you feeling now bro ? I’m developer also have problem with screens 20 days passed out
How much - degree did you had before surgery? And in which age did you do the surgery?
Good one. Thanks for making this video
It only lasts around 5years as regression is typically -0.11D per year. It's a terrible amount of damage to your corneas for just a few years of not glasses. I needed glasses after 9months.
Doesn’t it depend on a lot of factors like age etc? Most people I know have no issues, only when they hit 40/45y and get +
@@nicoleverhasselt8891 THe surgeon will aim for more hyperopia the younger you are. As the older you are the less accomodation you have. THerefore more likley to complain about loss of short sight. So, yes the older you are the less benefit there is. Again surgeon do not tell you this. They need sales and no complaints within the first year only.
@@-1-2-1-2 years after smile, I'm 22 yo and i feel slow regression whole this time which is super annoying. I just regret i was stupid thinking the best recent eye surgery will replace lenses and glasses. And yeah, i still see holo effect and studd
Sorry mate but don't make these baseless claims trying to scare people on here. I had my surgery yesterday and it's such a relief to see my eyes improve so quickly. Of course I am aware I may have a light recovery compared to others, but posting these horror stories (and not making people inform themselves through reputable sources) is quite appalling. There are always risks in every form of surgery and your surgeon/hospital informs you about the (minimal) chance of these, if not you've seen a quaker. And it's normal that from 40 years onwards, you might need reading glasses as your eye ages like any other. My experience has been nothing but positive😊
@@maar73n79Are you a promotor/marketeer? If you are a real patient who did your surgery? Baseless?? I have two barely functional eyes. My surgeon has several clinical negligence cases against him for the lives he has destroyed as do many of the active surgeons. But the economics still favour those who choose to do this to unsuspecting patients. From your stance it's pretty clear you were not handed the laser manufacturers patient information booklet that shows just a snippet of the appalling stats of SMILE. You would have to be mad to go ahead if you were aware of the real world results. If you can see anywhere near normal consider yourself extremely lucky.
Thanks for the video, but i have a question for you, you mentioned that you had problem with near vision , so when did it becomes clear again after the surgery?
when did your nearsight improve? How long did it take. I had my Smile surgery a few days ago and my nearsight is not so good. :(
It was really good after 1-2 months. Few days isn’t much, so I’d wait a bit and not worry. But of course I’m not a doctor, so, if you think it’s really bad, talk with your surgeon
@@NateBabaev
many thanks for your response. did your sight improve in this time as well?
@@e.s.180 I think after 1-2 months, there’s no special improvement. I had yearly check recently and one of my eyes actually were under done. Even though surgeon said it was overdone at first, and it will improve over time, it didn’t. So I will go to correction for that eye.
@@NateBabaevi think it is not possible to get a recorrection after smile surgery. Possible with lasik but not with smile
@@kingzzdesnooker131 yes, SMILE can only be done once. If there’s correction, the suggested one for me is LASIK.
I just got my surgery and need to know if one eye being worse than the other post operation is normal? I can't really see out of one eye right now but the other is fine
Same shit. One eye works good and the other one is not clear I have to squint to see clearly
What diopter do you have and what cylinder?
I just had SMILE a week ago and I absolutely hate it. Everything is hazy, lights are glowing all the time, cant see up close or far away. Hate it. Wish I would have done Lasik or not at all
How is it now? I would imagine a lot of people would experience what you did 1 week post surgery.
Me too, how is it now?
Hey..how's your eyes vision now
@@angelica.138 how is your vision now
@@sarahyy.yy_3 1 month after surgery and my vision is ok, I can do everything without glasses (work on pc, sport, night driving) I have a very little bit of myopia but it can increase, and sometimes I have halos around illuminated objects (like a slightly dirty photograph), because cornea isn’t perfect yet. It will improve in the next 5 months
How long did it take for you to see clearly again after the surgery? week? months?
Thank you for the video. How are your eyes at the moment?
They’re very good
How long was your vision blurry looking at computers? It’s been 14 weeks for me post smile and my vision is sometimes blurry when looking at computers - but good for long distance most of the time.
My surgeon said he overcorrected my vision and my brain hadn’t adjusted yet, but 14 weeks seems like a while…
My blurry vision with computers lasted around 2 months. Later, it got better and better. I had talked about it to my surgeon, and he also told me the same thing that he over corrected.
I have my SMILE surgery booked in a month, but have second thoughts, with over-corrections being one of the issues I'm afraid of. I work on the computer and want to have stable vision close-up. Was the over-correction intentional?
@@twisteddiana at least, my doctor said it was intentional (don’t know why). But I haven’t had any issues with that anymore so far. I can see the close up or far without a problem.
@@NateBabaev Thanks a lot for answering! Really glad your vision stabilized. Enjoy 20/20!
@@twisteddiana Overcorrections are important, because higher order aberrations after surgery (bad night, display and double vision) needs to flatten out by stroma regrow. When your eye is healthy, your stroma will regrow until your vision is clear. This can result to nearsightness, when your vision would be exactly 0 post operative. At very long periods, your eye would become nearsighted until your vision is clear (but only when your eye has healthy ceratocytes).
For example when you read a lot and you are young (until 40), your retina triggers regrow of your cornea stroma until the light is focused to a single point, but this needs time, because slow turnover of that cells 2 - 3 Years.
This is the cause why industrial countries suffer from nearsightness. Its because displays needs clear vision and this triggers regrow of stroma cells until vision is clear, but this process can end up in glasses again.
Where did you buy The glasses to where after The operation ?
Hospital gave it
After how many days after the surgery did you see absolutely clearly? It's been almost 3 weeks since may surgery and vision is still kinda hazy. Is it normal or not😢?
If you’re talking about seeing far, it was already great after few hours of surgery.
I feel you! Today it’s been 4 weeks / 1 month and my vision is still kinda hazy, I’m really worried 😞
@@jeyjey3355 dont do any activities that dry them out. Get plenty of sleep. Get it monitored by another opthalmologist. THe surgeon will only say its fine even when it not.
2 weeks gone but my vision also hazy in daytime. Also vision is glaring while i use laptop. Light is not stable in one place and it passes near the object so i feel hazy vision in daytime.
@@NitinKumar-wz4xbhow your vision right now brother?
How are your eyes now? Any degradation?
Full vission recovery in how much time???
thank you. I got it done recently.
After how many days u took bath?
Can i wear colored contacts after smile?
How was your experience of smile?
Yes, but at least 1 week after the surgery, to make sure everything is well healed.
Thanks for sharing your experience. Which hospital/clinic did you get your eyes done? Who was your surgeon? I also live in Finland and planning to get same surgery. Thanks in advance
Hi! At Eira Hospital and surgeon was Jarno Ylitalo. Petri Oksman also is very popular there.
@@NateBabaev Hi, thanks for answering. I’m also considering Eira, went there for the pre checkup. What was your prescription before surgery? Im mostly worried about under/over correction. Were you given any guarantee for what your eyesight would be after surgery?
@@nut941 PLease don't go ahead until you have done your homework. Start by asking for the patient information booklet that they have to give you but only upon request. One surgeon fighting this bad industry says SMILE inflicts more damage to the corneal nerve plexus than lasik. It is a marketing gimmick as people dont like the idea of the large flap.
@@nut941 Did you have at eira? I'm also considering with Petri Oksman. My sights are -2.5 and -2.75
@@asustufa1515 Yes, Eira around 6 months ago. Everything went well, but I would recommend to visit atleast one more clinic for pre-check. Felt a bit rushed at Eira, but this might be industry standard.
Brother are you sure these symptoms go away after surgery
No they are permeant. I had SMILE in 2019 and I have appalling vision and need glasses more than before the surgery.
@@-1-2-1- I am going yo cancel my appointment than if this is the case
@@missraja6307Opthalmologists avoid the surgery themselves. THat tells you enough. Save your eyes. If you somehow get tempted message me and I will show you the real data and not the marketing.
@@-1-2-1- yeah i
‘m interested to know more about it
I could already see clearly after a day. For a week or close sight was problem. Overall, after a month everything goes away except the glaring text sometimes when the contrast is too high. Other than that, it’s been fine.
Avoid surgeries if u want remove glass
Gohead contact lenses which is super comfortable even swimming or playing etc…
learn to love glases. Its the only thing that can get you 20:10 vision. You should only expect 20:30 from laser and a significant increase in higher order uncorrectable abborations. Hence the common description of "vaseline vision"
Hi how old are u?
How long does it take for you to see clearly after the surgery?
Basically few hours after the surgery, my vision was clear. However, as I mentioned in the video, I had issue with reading books for some time.
It never clears. I libve my life like a clear bag has been put over my head. COnstant pain. Surgeon says he did a good job but "I should not have expected perfect results"
@@-1-2-1- I think you should sue your surgeon. If your eyes didn’t suit for such surgery, they should’ve let you know + the possible risks.
@@NateBabaev I am suing. It wont get my eyes back. But in reality, most surgeons lie and manipulate for commercial gain. Its because there's no regulation. By in large they get away with near murder. btw, it would be helpful to not "recommend" this surgery as this is the main cause for people getting the surgery. People think they will get the same good outcome. But that only happens 60% of the time. Perhaps consider adding an advisory on the end of your video. I can help you with that if you need info/resources. We don't want any more suicides or ruined lives.
@@-1-2-1- why you considered simle as LASIK is also a option?
2 weeks gone but my vision also hazy in daytime. Also vision is glaring while i use laptop. Light is not stable in one place and it passes near the object so i feel hazy vision in daytime.
Are you better now ??? Pleaze anser me ...i wil have this operation next Friday😢
Any updates
@@dulcelilita216 how did your surgery go? Any updates
@@sarahyy.yy_3 I had Dreamt with that I was in hospital and doctor stoped my surgery in the sist minut. That what had happened exactly on friday.......he stopped my operation saying me that was dangerios for you and I don't recomended it for you and how they sent you to me. .....CONCLUTION he saved my live and my iyes. This operation is only recomended for people Who have a bite of miopia not alot.
Please give updates
Did the surgery hurt?
No, it didn’t.
holy shit suomileijona necklace
i am probably going to get surgery soon too
THis surgery will ruin your eyes like it did mine. Industry is unregulated and surgeons are only commercially motivated. Save your eyes.
im going in 2 weeks bro, im shitting my pants rn
Update ?@@frontalroast4851
@@frontalroast4851 how'd it go
It took 10 minutes to taoe the thong out your eye? Not sure what hebdid but for me it was like a minute.
SMILE is not good. It is a scam. If you really want to do laser, do latest LASIK wavefront.
Wavefront lasik is the same surgery as standard lasik and carries the same risks. The only difference is an additional modification to the ablation profile/pattern that attempts to correct aberrations that are higher order than myiopia and (lower order) astigmatism. The damage and trauma and questionable healing is unchanged. So too is the expected loss of vision quality and quantity.
@@-1-2-1- Do you live under this comment section? Every comment I have read you are bullshitting people, just because you are in minority and had unlucky doctor doesn't mean every surgeon is bad nor is there not a single success story. Stop scaring people, just share your experience and fly away
After how many days you can see clearly to near? I have some halo effect and blur when use laptop or phone
I had undergone latest silk surgery and I got the glare and it's been 20 days now. How about your eyes is glares still there ?
@@funinfinity9721, yeap glares still there, it’s about 20 days after surgery. What about you ?
@@funinfinity9721also I have starbursts effect -_-
@@alexkenty6258 can you provide an update how are your eyes now, do you still have the starburst effect?
@@mynirsheqeri1535 Hi, I’m still experiencing some starburst effects, but my eyes are gradually improving. However, I’ve noticed that my vision becomes blurry when using my laptop.
Also I’m practicing 20 rule.
This result after five months operation.