newnative Posted March 13 Share Posted March 13 Thirteen years ago my spouse and I had lasik done at Bangkok Hospital Pattaya with Dr. Somchai. I was 59. I had explored doing lasik in the US but was told I would still need glasses--either for distance or for reading. Since the whole point was to ditch glasses, I did not have it done in the US. I explained my US experience to Dr. Somchai and he told me he thought he could do my eyes with one stronger for distance and the other stronger for close vision. Had the surgery done--we both did fine. After several days, I was finding that my near vision was not as good as I thought it would be for reading. Included in the surgery were follow-up appointments for several weeks. At one of the first follow-ups I mentioned that my close vision wasn't too good. The doctor said this was normal and please try not to use reading glasses to read. Instead, wait and your close vision will improve. I didn't say anything but I was thinking, 'yeah, right--when does anything get better.' But, I did what he said and, lo and behold, my close vision did improve until it was quite good. And, my distance vision was good, too. No glasses needed for either. Yaa! Thirteen years later and my distance vision is still great. My close vision has gotten a little worse and I have trouble with very small print--especially if the light isn't too good. My spouse's distance vision has gotten worse and he has been wearing glasses when he drives at night. We went back to Dr. Somchai a week or so ago for eye check-ups and he recommended doing SuperSight for both of us, which involves an overnight hospital stay. We are still debating whether to have it. Curious if anybody has had it done and any pros and cons from it. Thanks! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
noobexpat Posted March 13 Share Posted March 13 1 hour ago, newnative said: Thirteen years ago my spouse and I had lasik done at Bangkok Hospital Pattaya with Dr. Somchai. I was 59. I had explored doing lasik in the US but was told I would still need glasses--either for distance or for reading. Since the whole point was to ditch glasses, I did not have it done in the US. I explained my US experience to Dr. Somchai and he told me he thought he could do my eyes with one stronger for distance and the other stronger for close vision. Had the surgery done--we both did fine. After several days, I was finding that my near vision was not as good as I thought it would be for reading. Included in the surgery were follow-up appointments for several weeks. At one of the first follow-ups I mentioned that my close vision wasn't too good. The doctor said this was normal and please try not to use reading glasses to read. Instead, wait and your close vision will improve. I didn't say anything but I was thinking, 'yeah, right--when does anything get better.' But, I did what he said and, lo and behold, my close vision did improve until it was quite good. And, my distance vision was good, too. No glasses needed for either. Yaa! Thirteen years later and my distance vision is still great. My close vision has gotten a little worse and I have trouble with very small print--especially if the light isn't too good. My spouse's distance vision has gotten worse and he has been wearing glasses when he drives at night. We went back to Dr. Somchai a week or so ago for eye check-ups and he recommended doing SuperSight for both of us, which involves an overnight hospital stay. We are still debating whether to have it. Curious if anybody has had it done and any pros and cons from it. Thanks! Sounds like you use monovision. One eye for near, the other for far. I use it too - had 1 eye lasered in UK when i was in my 30's. Great, no glasses ...hopefully forever 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Acharn Posted March 13 Share Posted March 13 On 3/12/2024 at 4:22 PM, PingRoundTheWorld said: Pun intended? Seriously though, I've been having vision issues too for the past couple of years. I've been wearing glasses/contacts for the past 30 years - always been fine both reading and far sight with glasses or contacts on, but now I can barely read anything with contacts on, and it's not optimal with glasses either. Far sight isn't what it used to be either. I had a couple of vision tests done and my prescription hasn't changed - doc had me try different close prescriptions too but they were even worse. So bottom line is I can ace a vision test, but I don't feel like my vision is what it used to be. Anyway, might give Rutnin a try. 👍 When I served in the Air Force, from 1955-1958, I didn't need glasses. When I joined the Army in 1965, I needed glasses. When my wife took me to an ophthalmologist in 2008, she diagnosed cataracts. When I went to another ophthalmologist in 2021, I had astigmatism, along with nearsightedness. I wish I could afford lasik, but the prices I've been quoted are ฿80-100,000, which is far beyond my financial ability. I gather lasik only corrects astigmatism temporarily anyway. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
newnative Posted March 14 Share Posted March 14 9 hours ago, Acharn said: When I served in the Air Force, from 1955-1958, I didn't need glasses. When I joined the Army in 1965, I needed glasses. When my wife took me to an ophthalmologist in 2008, she diagnosed cataracts. When I went to another ophthalmologist in 2021, I had astigmatism, along with nearsightedness. I wish I could afford lasik, but the prices I've been quoted are ฿80-100,000, which is far beyond my financial ability. I gather lasik only corrects astigmatism temporarily anyway. If you saw my earlier post, I had lasik done 13 years ago; I also have astigmatism. Today, at age 72, my eyesight is still very good, both distance and close-up, although I have noticed some deterioration with my close-up vision with very small print, especially if the light is not good. I think 13 years and counting would be considered more than temporary. Getting lasik was one of the best things I have done, healthwise, and I would recommend it. Before having it done, I was struggling with trying to adapt to bifocals, which I hated. I've loved being glasses-free for 13 years. Well worth the money, I think--maybe do some more shopping around. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rampant Rabbit Posted March 14 Author Share Posted March 14 16 hours ago, Gilligan In Drag said: I would not trust Thai doctors with my eyes, in fact my cataract is as a result of using medication prescribed by a Thai government university hospital doctor/opthamologist. I was alerted to the problem and warned off the medication by a third party by a pharmacist in Bangkok who was aghast regarding the medication I was asking to have refilled. He told me it was a ridiculously strong and dangerous medication to be using for my problem, he asked me with visble concern in his tone,"Who asked you to take this medicine? is this your idea or something? I said no I was given it for blepharitis by an eye doctor and due to go back to see her in a few weeks. His widened, "how long have you been using it, two weeks, three weeks?" I said "Four months." he nearly jumped out of his skin, "Oh my god man! STOP! DO YOU WANT TO LOSE YOUR EYESIGHT!" He kept asking me, "Are you sure you are still under the doctor's care and advice I said yes she keeps having me come back again and again, he said sounds like shes running an experiment on you and you need to stop using this medication and never go back to her office, Stop now!" My eyesight indeed was quickly degeneratingand I told him about it and he said surely its the medication. "That is the most disgusting thing i hjave heard all day, nobody uses that medication except for very serious conditions that won't clear up otherwise. i went to check with another specialist a Bangkok Hospital opthamologist who told me I now had a cataract and that the medication was a good cadidate for what caused the cartaract. She did want to get involved I don;t think and said she had never heard of the medication I was given and recommended I get surgery. The husband of a friend of my wife, has had his lenses in his eyes replaced and advised me "Don't do it. You'll be going in and out of the clinic to fix this fix that for the rest of your life, they trashed my eyes. They did a terrible job with the surgery and there's has been on and off complications for years" I think I'd rather go blind, utterly fed up with the medical profession. Thanks for the report, I have to look at all sides and it appears many have had success, sorry to hear yours didnt work out. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JimTripper Posted March 30 Share Posted March 30 (edited) On 3/13/2024 at 3:22 PM, Gilligan In Drag said: I would not trust Thai doctors with my eyes, in fact my cataract is as a result of using medication prescribed by a Thai government university hospital doctor/opthamologist. I was alerted to the problem and warned off the medication by a third party by a pharmacist in Bangkok who was aghast regarding the medication I was asking to have refilled. He told me it was a ridiculously strong and dangerous medication to be using for my problem, he asked me with visble concern in his tone,"Who asked you to take this medicine? is this your idea or something? I said no I was given it for blepharitis by an eye doctor and due to go back to see her in a few weeks. His widened, "how long have you been using it, two weeks, three weeks?" I said "Four months." he nearly jumped out of his skin, "Oh my god man! STOP! DO YOU WANT TO LOSE YOUR EYESIGHT!" He kept asking me, "Are you sure you are still under the doctor's care and advice I said yes she keeps having me come back again and again, he said sounds like shes running an experiment on you and you need to stop using this medication and never go back to her office, Stop now!" My eyesight indeed was quickly degeneratingand I told him about it and he said surely its the medication. "That is the most disgusting thing i hjave heard all day, nobody uses that medication except for very serious conditions that won't clear up otherwise. i went to check with another specialist a Bangkok Hospital opthamologist who told me I now had a cataract and that the medication was a good cadidate for what caused the cartaract. She did want to get involved I don;t think and said she had never heard of the medication I was given and recommended I get surgery. The husband of a friend of my wife, has had his lenses in his eyes replaced and advised me "Don't do it. You'll be going in and out of the clinic to fix this fix that for the rest of your life, they trashed my eyes. They did a terrible job with the surgery and there's has been on and off complications for years" I think I'd rather go blind, utterly fed up with the medical profession. I get that feeling also. People are being fooled by fake reviews around medical tourism in Thailand. Many places now offer discounts at check out for 5 star reviews. I have had several experiences with places I researched and looked great, mostly dental related. Then when I had work done it was shoddy. The quality is not there, it's just an outer window dressing and a clean lobby. My suggestion, a quality place in the Usa (if you can afford it). Edited March 30 by JimTripper Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
oxo1947 Posted March 30 Share Posted March 30 On 3/12/2024 at 5:03 PM, Tropicalevo said: I used to wear glasses for short and mid distances. Then cataracts happened. Went to Bangkok Phuket and had tri focal lenses fitted. Brilliant. No need for glasses any more. The tri focal lenses give me short, middle and long distance vision. A tad pricey but worth every baht. I am not an eye specialist but it might be an option. https://www.brightviewcenter.com/ I also had tri focal lenses put in, 16 years ago -- never needed Glasses since I am now 77 -- I think you have to be over 55 to have that Opp. If you can afford it , its such a simple opp, done in about an hour--although they like you to stay overnight in case of any infection. Over the 16 years really very happy about it. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rampant Rabbit Posted April 2 Author Share Posted April 2 (edited) On 3/30/2024 at 3:41 PM, oxo1947 said: I also had tri focal lenses put in, 16 years ago -- never needed Glasses since I am now 77 -- I think you have to be over 55 to have that Opp. If you can afford it , its such a simple opp, done in about an hour--although they like you to stay overnight in case of any infection. Over the 16 years really very happy about it. Thanks I think this is the route I want to go down, no glasses perfect, how is it for night driving? Even better that you had this done when you were about 60 which is what I have just turned. Edited April 2 by Rampant Rabbit Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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