krp74 For some additional information on eye alignment problems please see the post in the Ophthalmology forum of 5/17 from irishdrummerboy. Some of that is germane to your problem.
Since you were born with poor alignment of your eyes (congenital
strabismusBefore and after strabismus repair
Eye muscle repair
Strabismus), the centers in your brain that nomally keep the eyes pointed at the same thing (fusion centers) are very weak and poorly developed. The failure of your eyes to align and work together (fusion) after your
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First-testosterone mc surgery reduces the success rate (prognosis) for additional surgery and it will likely not be possible to develop the perfect fusion that most of us are blessed to have (binocular coordinated single vision with perfect depth perception).
Your lasik will not be a factor in additional eye muscle surgery. Each additional operation on your eye muscles will have a lower success rate than the previous. The biggest risk would be that the cosmetic appearance of your eye might not be improved, an additional risk would be double vision.
Your best course of action would be to see a Pediatric Ophthalmologist (EyeMD) that does adult strabismus surgery. Only after a complex set of measurements are done would it be possible to estimate your chance of success and outline the risks and complications of surgery.
Remember that strabismus and amblyopia (reduced vision due to misalignment or blurred vision in one eye) are often hereditary. If you have children they should be check as an infant if the eyes are out of alignment or the child does not seem to see well or follow objects or look at faces. If all seems normal a complete medical eye examination should be done by an ophthalmologist or pediatric ophthalmologist about age 3 to search for strabismus or amblyopia (that may be too small to be noticed by parents). These recommendations would apply to anyone related to you by blood that has infants and children (nieces, nephews, children, grandchildren).
JCH MD
My question here is about LASIK and strabismus. I was once told by my doctor that strabismus is helped by glasses and contacts and that contacts were better (for correction) because the lense was closer to the eye. (I actually wear glasses 99% of the time because I'm too irresponsible with contacts.) Would LASIK help strengthen my eyes some? I've always desperately wanted to correct my vision (L: -5.75, R: -5.25) with LASIK as soon as I heard about it but held off because my problem with strabismus was more important. I don't want to have strabismus surgery again if I can help it so any advice about vision therapy and if it could help me would be appreciated
The myopia and strabismus are two different problems. Most Eye MDs would not do additional eye muscle surgery unless your eye control was faltering badly and your eye was "out" more often thatn "in line".
To find either an ophthalmologist that is an strabismus specialist or a refractive surgeon you can go to the American Academy of Ophthalmology website www.aao.org and use the "Find An Eye MD" feature to find a board certfied, Fellow in the American Academy of Ophthalmology in your city. You would likely be extremely pleased with LASIK.
JCH MD