The recovery time on cataract sx time is great too! Our exotics doctor got hers done and was back to neutering mice by the next week!
I'm hopeful i can get back that quickly, but a client who had this surgery recently was told she wasn't allowed to lift anything over 5 pounds until her next recheck to keep blood pressure, and therefore intraocular pressure, down. Her next recheck was a month later.
While my blood pressure isn't high, my job involves lifting 50 pound dogs by myself, and heavier dogs with help. It involves restraining uncooperative animals of many weights and sizes. My job is extremely physical.
About me: late 50's nearsighted since birth. Until this week my left eye was -17.0 and my right eye was -10.25. This meant that the best they could do for my glasses was to get me to 20/70 for my left eye and 20/20 for my right. However the disparity between my eyes caused me to basically become mono-vision due to the difficulty in processing data between both eyes at once. I now have to learn to properly use my left eye. I also have issues requiring vertical and horizontal adjusting prism lenses because my eyes don't line up an image correctly.
I knew I was going to need to have surgery due to cataracts for some time & did a lot of research. The biggest decision I (and everyone else has) is the difficulty determining what type of lens to get.
Let me first say that you can change your mind. Yes, making a change after you have a lens installed does require another surgery but don't feel like you're screwed if things are bad with your first choice. Keep in mind however that you will likely have to pay out of pocket for the change if the doctor didn't make any mistakes and its just your choice. Ask your doctor if this is an option before you go under the knife in case you are a special case, such as having Lasik in the past.
The most impactful choice is if you're getting fixed vs. multi-focal lenses. The best advice I got regarding this is that if you really want perfectly clear vision then go with fixed. If you can't stand spots on your glasses etc. you won't like the downsides of multi-focal lenses. Multi-focal are cool if you can accept the halo effect at night and sometimes during the day. Due to my issue needing prism lenses I'll never get away from wearing glasses so I went with a fixed lens (and I hate the halo I already had with my cataracts so I knew I wouldn't want it while driving at night).
When choosing a lens consider what your FUTURE life is going to be. Most people go with a distance lens and wear readers because they are tired of being nearsighted. Maybe you want to be able to go water skiing or hang gliding and see whats going on. I went with a near lens because most of my life involves close up work. Soldering electronic parts, computer work, reading books, etc. My doctors were surprised and tried to talk me into a distance lens but I know my life. (They weren't assholes about it, they just wanted to be sure that I really knew what I wanted).
There are other types of lenses like Toric which are used if you have a bad astigmatism but that's something best discussed with your doctor. As a side note, there are some people that will get one eye set for close up and one eye set for distance. As someone that has lived with a large variance between both eyes don't do this unless you know exactly what you are doing. You will lose your binocular vision and many things will become more difficult in life because of this.
I watched a bunch of videos of actual surgeries because I wanted to know exactly what was going on as I saw blurry objects passing in front of my eye. If you don't want to do this, its understandable. Know that the doctor will gladly tell you everything they are doing at each step of the procedure if you change your mind and ask.
I did my eyes 1 after the other (Mon & Tues) and both days were the same.
On the day of the procedure, we planned ahead a little. Have a light meal before hand if your nerves allow it. Drink enough water. Have snacks, food & drink waiting at home so you don't have to go out afterwards. The actual procedure is less than 5 minutes but you could sit around for 2 hours before hand. I didn't have an appetite afterwards for quite a while so it helped to have eaten before hand.
If they don't offer, ask about the anti anxiety meds, even if you don't think you need it (I did). The office I went to had a mix of 3 drugs in a small short term dose. One of them was Ketamine and I found out while there that it actually helps the procedure. There is a side effect of Ketamin called the 'Ketamine Stare' that helps keep your eye more stable and can help offset the concern of not moving your eye during the procedure.
Dilation drops... In a normal office visit you may have a drop in each eye as they run their tests. At this office they put 3 drops in each eye spaced a few minutes apart. Your eyes will be REALLY dilated when you leave so plan accordingly if you have a hard time driving after a regular visit. My dilation didn't wear off completely until 2 days later (yes 3 days of some level of dilation). I normally don't process the chemical quickly for some reason so this was not surprising. Most people only have 2 days of effects.
The actual procedure felt like it took forever on my first eye and my second eye it sped past. The transition from old to new lens was the strangest and most vulnerable feeling cause if a fire broke out at that stage, you'd be a mess. That middle stage of no lens only lasted about 15-30 seconds though. It was done quickly and I walked out on my own two feet (they forgot to make me use a wheelchair on my first visit).
Results: my results are great. Both eyes are at about -2.5. You won't know your final results until about a month later as the swelling goes down and your eyes settle. If you're young or have amazing healing you may know after 2 weeks but don't get new glasses (if needed) till 4 weeks.
Improvements to my vision following the first half of cataract surgery are 99 percent positive. Colors are brighter; distances, clearer; details, more finely etched.
And think of all the time I’m saving not searching for my glasses …
I have to say, however, that my first good look in the mirror gave me pause. I immediately thought of the Lord Huron lyric: “There’s a stranger in my eyes again …”
When did all that character happen ..? Where’d all those lines and creases come from - all those chips and cracks and blemishes …? They are, I suppose, the inevitable dents and scratches of 76 years and 307 days on earth.
I’m hoping that I’ll grow accustomed to my face again.
just letting yall know that i will be getting cataract surgery on thursday and will be out of commission for about a week. i'm ok! it's a congenital cataract (a little blind spot in my eye) i've had since i was about two months old and i've been able to avoid surgery up until now, but it's started spreading. cataract surgery is actually one of the safest and quickest surgeries you can get and recovery is about a week, so i'll be gone from thursday till the week after
I haven't talked much about the eye problems I've been having for the past couple years, because it's just tedious and unhappy-making. Seems I have an allergy to something (probably Miette Kitty's saliva) that causes my eye(s) to get red and really swell up.
I saw my optometrist about it in summer 2023, because it was messing with my vision, and he put me on steroid drops. I continued to use them whenever an eye would swell, refilling the prescription several times over the next year.
My vision only got worse, and fast.
Finally, after waiting months to get in to visit a proper ophthalmologist, I was diagnosed with cataracts, brought on by -drum roll- the steroid drops. Turns out you shouldn't use steroids long-term, as they mess with your body. (Arnold Schwarzenegger has a lot to say about that.)
So I need to get new, un-bumpy lenses installed. Which I do starting tomorrow (right eye), then again in two weeks for the other eye.
Ironically (again), the ophthalmologist put me back on steroid drops to prevent new swelling before the surgery... so my vision has gotten so bad that I can't drive at night, and bright lights hurt, and I can't read a screen that has white background. Critiquing student stories has been interesting.
Hopefully all goes well and my vision comes back - I have a new telescope to use!
(Not the one in the image - that's the WIRO instrument we visited on our honeymoon drive back from the wedding, which Mike Brotherton kindly introduced Lauren to.)
I'm worried I'll never see properly again after all this suffering, so wish me luck. I'd like to see through that new scope, and I'd really like to see my new baby boy clearly!
I would really appreciate some good thoughts or something today, if you can.
I'm going in for my fourth, and final, eye surgery. I haven't had the best luck with them so far, lots of complications and side effects, so I'm pretty nervous about what's going to happen after this one. This is the last resort now so it's a case of having the surgery and hoping for the best.