Thank you. I don't believe that my surgeon intended to aim for mono vision. If that was the case, I would not have paid for a premium lens in that eye. I have had two YAGs on that eye in an attempt to free up the lens "stuck" lens. I have two additional questions.
1). Aside from an intentional aim for mono vision, can you think of any reason to select -2.0 for a Crystalens? It seems rather extreme.
2). I also have significant positive dysphotopsia in that eye which got worse after the second YAG. Do you think a piggyback lens could address myopia as well as dysphotopsia?
Obviously your left eye is much more nearsighted than your right eye after surgery. It appears that your surgeon aimed for a monovision, with the left eye as the reading eye. If you are happy with the near vision in the left eye, then you may leave it as is. If you are unable to adapt to the difference between the eyes, then a LASIK or implant lens exchange could be done. The latter option (IOL exchange) is more invasive, and could be associated with complications if you have already had a YAG capsulotomy (laser to open a cloudy posterior capsule behind the implant).