Thanks for reminding me, Cali. I've never had a refractive eye surgery, so I am different - my diagnosis is ocular rosacea. But I'm very happy that you've improved... it is frustrating, however, to never know exactly why things got worse.
That reminds me of a book I've been reading about managing chronic diseases. Blinks recommended it in a post on Sept 13 (http://www.dryeyezone.com/talk/showt...5812#post75812)
The book is "Living a Healthy Life with Chronic Conditions" (2012) out of Stanford University. It's excellent (I'm only up to Ch.4 - but when I finish the book, I'm going to start again at the beginning).
In the first chapter, the authors discuss the differences between acute and chronic diseases. Chronic diseases have slow beginnings, often uncertain cause(s) (especially early on), usually last for life, are sometimes difficult to diagnose, and tests are often of limited value. The combination of many causes and unknown factors is frustrating for both doctor and patient especially because clear answers aren't available. The long-term effects of chronic diseases may be hard to predict. And the lack of regular or predictable patterns is a major characteristic. Chronic diseases also have symptoms that feed on each other - there is a vicious cycle that only gets worse until a way is found to break the cycle. [page 3]
Anyway, I hope you found the way(s) to break the cycle and continue to improve!
That reminds me of a book I've been reading about managing chronic diseases. Blinks recommended it in a post on Sept 13 (http://www.dryeyezone.com/talk/showt...5812#post75812)
The book is "Living a Healthy Life with Chronic Conditions" (2012) out of Stanford University. It's excellent (I'm only up to Ch.4 - but when I finish the book, I'm going to start again at the beginning).
In the first chapter, the authors discuss the differences between acute and chronic diseases. Chronic diseases have slow beginnings, often uncertain cause(s) (especially early on), usually last for life, are sometimes difficult to diagnose, and tests are often of limited value. The combination of many causes and unknown factors is frustrating for both doctor and patient especially because clear answers aren't available. The long-term effects of chronic diseases may be hard to predict. And the lack of regular or predictable patterns is a major characteristic. Chronic diseases also have symptoms that feed on each other - there is a vicious cycle that only gets worse until a way is found to break the cycle. [page 3]
Anyway, I hope you found the way(s) to break the cycle and continue to improve!
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