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cataract power calculations for monocular vision

I'm 70, nearsighted, astigmatism. My left non-dominant eye cataract was operated on 12/12/06 with relaxing incisions. My surgeon recommended against monocular vision but, for many years, I very successfully had a distance contact lens in my right eye and a near contact lens in my left eye. The surgeon finally agreed (verbally) to provide a fixed focus IOL (Alcon SN60WF) set for
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Avatar universal
well i wont really "recommend" anything.  thats hard to do over the internet.  i try to avoid it.  but i will tell you that most patients have a very difficult time changing their distance vision/near vision eye.  if you were happy with monovision for many years with your left eye as the near-vision eye...relatively few patients IMO can/could "switch" and have their right eye be the near vision eye.  thats difficult to do.  kind of like learning to drive a stick shift (manual transmission) car with your left hand on the wheel and the right hand on the stick shift and driving that way for 20 years...then suddenly having to drive a car with the right hand on the wheel and shifting with the left.  is it POSSIBLE?  of course.  you might even be really good at making that switch.  but most people would find making that switch very difficult.
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Avatar universal
Some amazing news.  Monday, had preop visit with surgeon.  Left eye now has ZERO astigmatism and is almost 20/20.  Tuesday had  operation on right eye and today had first postop visit.  Have about 20/25 in right eye.  They didn't test me for astigmatism in the right eye yet.  I see great for distance but need 2.25 readers.  

On Monday, surgeon said he was planning to mention laser touch up on the left eye, when the time comes.  

Surgeon has also consistently told me that astigmatism can return over time, due to genetic factors.

For now, I'm very happy.  Since I'm to see him again pretty regularly over the next few months, we'll discuss the best course of action and the timing.

Thank you to all, but especially to Jodie J.
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Avatar universal
Congratulations on your wonderful results!  I think you may end up 20/20 in both eyes!  You'll have time to evaluate it, and see whether you want a touch-up.  Best wishes!
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Avatar universal
dorisb, for me, I would be satisfied with 20/40 or so in my non-dominant eye if I could have my dominant eye closer to 20/20.  With my close to 20/40 vision, my near (from about 18-24" on out) and intermediate ranges are good, it's the crisp distance driving vision that I miss.  I would like to be in your position where you still have a chance to get your dominant eye corrected for better distance than 20/40. Unfortunately, my situation may turn out to be the mirror image of what you are planning.

Please keep us updated. I hope your distance correction works out well.
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Avatar universal
My doctor has said essentially what you have:   "the results of limbal relaxing incisions are unpredictable, ... and any remaining astigmatism would affect the quality of vision at all IOL powers, thereby reducing the accuracy of those IOL Master power calculations."  He says the 13.0 power he used in my left eye would have been perfect if my astigmatism had been reduced to zero.

However, he is now strongly recommending making my right dominant eye the near vision eye, saying I should do just fine.  This is because, for about ten days now, I have been wearing eyeglasses with no lens over the left eye and have been reading relatively comfortably (relying on my eyeglass-corrected right eye), although it does feel slightly weird at times.  

I wonder if the fact that I spend more of my time at the computer or otherwise reading than at distance-viewing activities would argue for his recommendation?  That is, I'd be using my dominant eye for my more dominant activity?
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Avatar universal
Please ignore my last post.  It took me a while, but I finally realized my distance vision will be less than satisfactory if I have to rely solely on my left eye - it's been boosted by my right eye's eyeglass-corrected vision up till now.

So I'm going to take your very excellent advice to have the distance correction in my right eye and then later evaluate what's needed.

Thanks so much for your very clear advice as well as the reasoning on which you base it.
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Avatar universal
I responded before seeing your latest post, but I'm very glad that you decided against your doctor's last suggestion.  (I suspect that he was getting cold feet about doing the IOL exchange.)  Good luck with your second eye--and please let us know how things work out.  I think that in the end, you'll have vision that you're very pleased with.
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Avatar universal
Are you saying that your doctor wants to make your left eye, which has "not quite 20/40 vision" your distance eye?  And he wants to correct your right (dominant) eye for near vision?  I believe that Dr. Prince has already expressed his professional reservations about taking this course of action.  I can only respond on a personal level (i.e., how I'd react in your situation), and my response is NO, NO, NO, for the following reasons:

1) Almost 20/40 vision is not quite good enough for driving without correction in most states.  You'd probably need glasses/contact lens for driving, watching movies and many other activities, which defeats the purpose of having monovision.

2) If your right eye has significant astigmatism, the surgical outcome of that eye might also deviate significantly from the target refraction.  Conceivably, you could wind up needing glasses/contact lens for near/intermediate vision, too.

3) It would probably be okay to switch your near and distance eyes.  But, IMO, "probably" isn't good enough when we're talking about a surgical correction meant to be permanent.

I'm wondering if your doctor is trying to spare you the need for an IOL exchange in your left eye, which would involve an additional invasive procedure.  I haven't experienced either a lens exchange or laser vision enhancement, but my impression is that the laser enhancement would be the safer of the two, since it's non-invasive.  Having a laser vision "touch-up" is becoming quite common post cataract surgery, especially for people with astigmatism.  If your doctor doesn't do this type of procedure, I'm sure that he could refer you to someone who is experienced in this area.

Jmadison, since your situation is somewhat similar to dorisb's, I'd be interested in reading your comments.
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Avatar universal
it depends on the eye/implant and on how well the 1st surgery went.  sometimes its easy, sometimes it NOT easy.  dont know.  each case is different.
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Avatar universal
dorisb, I don't know how you are seeing at not quite 20/40 as I don't have your astigmatism.  I have, however, experienced a -3.0 "erroneous monovision" cataract result and I was miserable enough to go through an exchange that left me not quite 20/40. I wanted to be plano as this was my dominant eye, but the range of vision I have around 20/40 is, for me, better than the extremely limited range I had at -3.0 or 20/200. At about 20/40, I have walking around vision that I supplement with drugstore readers and driving glasses when needed.
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Avatar universal
Thanks so much.  Do you agree with my surgeon that it's a simple matter to switch IOLs?
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Avatar universal
Dr. Price has already addressed the issue of the advisability of switching your near-vision/distance-vision eyes.  In keeping with his advice, I'd like to suggest a possibility you haven't considered.

Like you, I also had high myopia with significant astigmatism.  Consequently, every cataract surgeon I consulted warned me that my surgical outcome would be difficult to predict.  This was because the results of limbal relaxing incisions are unpredictable, reducing astigmatism by about 50% on average, with wide variation.  And any remaining astigmatism would affect the quality of vision at all IOL powers, thereby reducing the accuracy of those IOL Master power calculations.  Two of the surgeons I saw actually suggested that I would probably benefit from some post-surgery laser vision enhancement (in my case PRK, since my eyes are borderline dry.)  But I was very lucky in surgery, and my results far exceeded my expectations.

Perhaps the astigmatism issue was a factor in the unexpected outcome of your left eye.  In any case, I suggest that you proceed with the distance correction on your right eye as scheduled.  I guess it's subjective, but I'd consider 20/20 or 20/25 distance vision to be an excellent result.  (IMO, 20/30 would be acceptable, but "not quite 20/40" would be less than satisfactory for monovision.)  Then allow enough time for healing before evaluating the outcome.  Any residual astigmatism you have might (or might not) be bothersome.  Your doctor could easily simulate what your vision would be like with different corrections.  Based on this evaluation you could decide which would work best, an IOL exchange in your left eye to improve near vision (but would not eliminate astigmatism) or some laser vision enhancement in one or both eyes (which could correct spherical error and eliminate astigmatism.)
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