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My LASIK worked for years. Why Am I Wearing Glasses Again?

My LASIK Worked for Years. Why Am I Wearing Glasses Again?

Many patients who had LASIK years ago are surprised when they eventually need glasses again. Some assume the procedure “wore off,” while others wonder whether they were overcorrected or whether their eyes simply continued to change.

The answer is often more complicated than a simple yes or no.

Patient Question

“I had LASIK many years ago and was told I might eventually need glasses again. Now I’m wearing stronger reading glasses than expected. Did my original surgery overcorrect my eyes?”

Dr. Chynn’s Answer

Possibly, but it is impossible to know without reviewing your records and performing a detailed examination.

There are several reasons someone may need glasses years after laser vision correction, including:

  • Natural aging of the eye
  • Progressive myopia
  • Presbyopia (the normal loss of near focusing ability)
  • Small residual prescription after the original surgery
  • Overcorrection or undercorrection
  • Lens changes inside the eye

Many patients believe LASIK itself failed, when in reality their eyes continued to change over time.

At Park Avenue LASEK, Dr. Emil Chynn carefully reviews a patient’s previous treatment, current prescription, and visual goals to determine what actually happened and whether additional treatment options may exist.

Can Surgeons Plan for Future Myopia?

For selected younger patients whose prescriptions may still progress, long-term planning can be an important part of treatment strategy.

Factors that may influence planning include:

  • Age
  • Rate of prescription change
  • Family history
  • Degree of myopia
  • Corneal thickness
  • Overall eye health

Every patient is different, and treatment planning should be individualized rather than based on a single formula.

Why High Myopia Cases Are Different

Patients with very high prescriptions often require more complex calculations than patients with mild nearsightedness.

Higher prescriptions can involve:

  • Greater tissue considerations
  • More careful long-term planning
  • Alternative procedures such as LASEK
  • Enhanced evaluation for future stability

This is one reason many patients seek a second opinion before deciding on surgery or enhancement treatment.

What If You Already Had LASIK?

Having had LASIK in the past does not automatically prevent future treatment.

Depending on your corneal measurements and overall eye health, options may include:

  • Observation
  • Glasses or contact lenses
  • Enhancement procedures
  • LASEK
  • Other advanced vision correction techniques

The best approach depends on a complete examination.

Schedule a Second Opinion

If your vision changed years after LASIK or you are wondering whether your original correction was optimal, schedule a consultation with Dr. Chynn for a personalized evaluation and discussion of your options.

Book a consultation:
https://parkavenuelasek.com/appointment/

Ask Dr. Chynn a question:
https://parkavenuelasek.com/real-patient-questions-answered-by-dr-chynn/

Emil Chynn, MD, MBA, FACS

ASK DR. CHYNN!

Get ONE question answered for FREE by our famous Harvard-trained surgeon who's been featured on Discovery Channel & CNN

Dr. Chynn graduated from Dartmouth + Columbia + Harvard + Emory + NYU & has been on ABC, NBC, CBS & in the NY Times & Wall St. Journal

He’s performed 40,000 LASIK, SMILE, PRK, LASEK, & ICLs. He’s the ONLY eye surgeon in the US who’s had both LASIK & LASEK himself, so knows the pluses & minuses of each!

Dr. Chynn specializes in treating cases which don’t qualify for LASIK, including:

• extreme prescriptions
• thin corneas
• astigmatism
• need for reading glasses

See other Real Patient Questions that Dr. Chynn has answered! Ask Dr Chynn 

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