Hi everyone
just wanted to share a treatment that worked for me. Like many of you, I regrettably had LASIK 7 yrs ago. I remember when the surgeon inserted the speculum in my left eye I experienced pain in the superior lateral part of my eye. He basically jammed it in there as it was too large for my eye. Recognizing the error, he then changed the speculum size. Following the surgery I had unilateral dryness in that eye and about 3 years later developed full blown dry eye syndrome. I had always speculated that the surgeon had damaged the tiny ductules that carry the tears from the lacrimal gland located just above the eye. This is NOT a widely accepted complication of eye surgery in the opthalmology community but certainly possible since those speculums are sharp steel objects. This may explain why about 4% of pateints undergoing ctaract surgery end up with dry eye although their surgery is minimally invasive. After seeing one doctor after another I found a link on the web to an occuloplastic surgeon in Florida who did his dissertation on the possiblity of lacrimal gland obstruction causing dry eye. He had hypothesized that probing the ductules could relieve the obstructions. I had tried all the standard treatemnts including Restasis, plugs etc. I finally convinced a occuloplastic surgeon near my home to probe (with a 30 gauge needle) the ductules in my left eye. CURE! My schirmer test in that eye went from 3 to 10. After a year I was still feeling a little dryness and I asked him to repeat the procedure making sure he got all ductules. My symptoms of dry eye are NOW GONE! So if you have unilateral dryness and recall pain when you got the speculum placed during LASIK or other eye surgery this may be the soruce of dryness. Be prepared to convince a skeptical occuloplastic surgeon but the actual probing is an office procedure minimally invasive done with topical eyedrops.
Good Luck!
just wanted to share a treatment that worked for me. Like many of you, I regrettably had LASIK 7 yrs ago. I remember when the surgeon inserted the speculum in my left eye I experienced pain in the superior lateral part of my eye. He basically jammed it in there as it was too large for my eye. Recognizing the error, he then changed the speculum size. Following the surgery I had unilateral dryness in that eye and about 3 years later developed full blown dry eye syndrome. I had always speculated that the surgeon had damaged the tiny ductules that carry the tears from the lacrimal gland located just above the eye. This is NOT a widely accepted complication of eye surgery in the opthalmology community but certainly possible since those speculums are sharp steel objects. This may explain why about 4% of pateints undergoing ctaract surgery end up with dry eye although their surgery is minimally invasive. After seeing one doctor after another I found a link on the web to an occuloplastic surgeon in Florida who did his dissertation on the possiblity of lacrimal gland obstruction causing dry eye. He had hypothesized that probing the ductules could relieve the obstructions. I had tried all the standard treatemnts including Restasis, plugs etc. I finally convinced a occuloplastic surgeon near my home to probe (with a 30 gauge needle) the ductules in my left eye. CURE! My schirmer test in that eye went from 3 to 10. After a year I was still feeling a little dryness and I asked him to repeat the procedure making sure he got all ductules. My symptoms of dry eye are NOW GONE! So if you have unilateral dryness and recall pain when you got the speculum placed during LASIK or other eye surgery this may be the soruce of dryness. Be prepared to convince a skeptical occuloplastic surgeon but the actual probing is an office procedure minimally invasive done with topical eyedrops.
Good Luck!
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