How To Treat
Astigmatism
Many nearsighted or farsighted patients
also have what is called “astigmatism”, which is a refractive
error whereby light is not focused to a single point. Vision is
indistinct at every distance because the cornea - which should
be dome-shaped - is "out-of-round" or shaped rather like the
back of a spoon. Such a cornea is more steeply curved in one
direction than the other, having two "axes" that are usually
perpendicular to each other. Depending on the person, 0.5
diopters or more of astigmatism starts to cause noticeably
blurred vision.
Laser surgery can smooth out the astigmatic cornea's
curvature, changing the shape of the central cornea (mainly the
central 6 or 7 millimeters) to look more like a symmetrical
soup bowl than the back of a lopsided spoon. To correct
astigmatism surgically, which is more difficult than treating
nearsightedness, physicians selectively remove tissue to make
the curvature of the steepest and flattest "meridians" (the
corneal curves of greatest and smallest refractive power) more
alike. For example, if you have simple myopic astigmatism, the
curvature of the meridians can be evened out by lasering tissue
from the steepest meridian to make it flatter - thereby moving
the light-bending effect of this forward axis back toward the
retina. Less tissue would be removed from the other, flatter
meridian.
Some refractive surgeons target astigmatism with a specially
"masked" broad-beam laser that is driven by customized computer
software. Since the surface topography of the cornea is
digitized, or put in numerical form, the computer knows which
areas are elevated. During a more modern surgical technique
using a "flying-spot" laser, a fast, small-beam laser dances
around the cornea, chipping away at the higher spots and
avoiding the flatter areas.
There are other causes of astigmatism besides irregularities
on the front surface of your cornea. The back of your cornea
also can be malformed. Furthermore, since your eye is a
two-lens system, problems with the front and back curvature of
your crystalline lens inside your eye can cause astigmatism. In
fact, any misalignment of the internal components of your eye
can blur images placed on your retina. A few people have
astigmatism because of a disparity between their line-of-sight
(the visual axis which goes from what they are looking at to
the light-sensing photoreceptors on the retinal fovea) and
their optic axis (the way the light strikes the retina).
Densely packed with receptors, the fovea - a tiny depression in
the retina - is the area of clearest vision. In these patients,
the rays of light fail to strike the fovea correctly. Laser
surgery is unable to treat these problems.
Currently, refractive surgeons can only correct the part of
your astigmatic error caused by irregularities in the curvature
of the front surface of your cornea. Consequently, the more
disparity between treatable surface corneal astigmatism and
total astigmatism, the less predictable the surgical result. To
even out the cornea's front surface, the laser can be
programmed to make the cornea more bowl-shaped. Unfortunately,
some patients have noticeable astigmatism caused by problems
inside their eyes. These patients will still have residual
astigmatism after surgery, even if the front of the cornea is
treated. In fact, many eyes that manifest no refractive
astigmatism (as measured during an eye exam) actually have
astigmatic defects inside the eye, but they are counterbalanced
by astigmatism on the surface of the cornea. This is one
instance in which two wrongs do make a right, because the error
in one lens offsets that in the other to provide clear
focus.
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