Reply
Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,358
Registered: ‎05-11-2013

One Cataract Gone, One To Go!

I had my right eye done on Tuesday, left will be done on Oct. 15th.

While the actual surgery was 7 minutes I was there from 10:10am (my arrival time) to 12:36 when DD picked me up.  Mostly just sat and waited. Had a checkup the next morning and he said I could drive locally.

 

All is good, no need for glasses for distance, just readers for close up.

 

Washing me face/showering is a challenge because I can't get water in my eye for a week.  The drops 3 times a day are no big deal, but that pesky shield at night for a week is annoying.

 

Oh my, I need to dust and do windows. lol

 

 

Regular Contributor
Posts: 215
Registered: ‎01-07-2023

Re: One Cataract Gone, One To Go!

Good luck. I had my eyes done a few years ago. Great not to need contact lenses and all the hassle with them.

 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 36,027
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: One Cataract Gone, One To Go!

I didnt use my shield after the first night trying it, I was allergic to the tape, and just forced myself to sleep on my other side, my doc said it was fine and to do that for 2 weeks. I had mine done 3 months apart. I used compounded drops which was a real pleasure, only one bottle to work with. 

Friend of mine used a different doc and he used the newer Dropless procedure and she had complications from it. 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 10,374
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: One Cataract Gone, One To Go!

My husband had his right eye done 2 weeks and the left eye is no where near being ready to be done.

 

He has diabetic macular edema in that eye and a side effect from the injections are cataracts.   

 

He was given the compounded drops, one drop a day for 4 weeks and his instructions say 3 weeks about water and soap in his eye.  He wore the shield for 4 nights.

 

We had to be there at 8:15 and were home by 10:30 and that included me being taken back out of the consultation room because they needed it for the person after him who was being told why they were cancelling his surgery.

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,358
Registered: ‎05-11-2013

Re: One Cataract Gone, One To Go!

Where I went is huge. Their website, if updated, lists 30 Drs.  There is a surgery center and Dr. offices next door.  

 

When they put me on a gurney there were 3 or 4 people doing things to me, IV, heart moniter hooked up, auto blood pressure cuff, oxygen.  I didn't have some of that when my hip was replaced.  I woke up from the twilight sleep (had a spinal) during my THR.  No oxygen or heart moniter.

Honored Contributor
Posts: 9,139
Registered: ‎06-25-2012

Re: One Cataract Gone, One To Go!

I had dropless cataract surgery. I hear doing the drops is a pain. My doctor inserted an invisible pouch in my eyeball that disolves in weeks. Never felt  thing while it was in.

"Pure Michigan"
Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,876
Registered: ‎08-01-2019

Re: One Cataract Gone, One To Go!

@CrazyKittyLvr2 Glad it went well for you!

Honored Contributor
Posts: 36,027
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: One Cataract Gone, One To Go!

[ Edited ]

@ID2 wrote:

I had dropless cataract surgery. I hear doing the drops is a pain. My doctor inserted an invisible pouch in my eyeball that disolves in weeks. Never felt  thing while it was in.


Glad to hear this, my friend had very uncomfortable reaction to this, for several weeks. I dont think my opth does this procedure. Using drops is not bad at all if you get the compounded ones. 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 10,374
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: One Cataract Gone, One To Go!


@ID2 wrote:

I had dropless cataract surgery. I hear doing the drops is a pain. My doctor inserted an invisible pouch in my eyeball that disolves in weeks. Never felt  thing while it was in.


How much of a pain could one drop a day be if the compounded drops are used?

Such drama...

Trusted Contributor
Posts: 1,432
Registered: ‎06-14-2011

Re: One Cataract Gone, One To Go!

@CrazyKittyLvr2  just got through having both of mine done as well.  The right eye was hard and painful as it took 8 tries to get the device to suction down on my eye.  They kept putting the numbing drops in and it took about 45 minutes to get it done.  The left one the following week went much faster but I suffered from extreme light sensitivity.  It felt like a knife going through my eye.  My eyes are still blurry at times and even with readers I have a hard time reading.  I am happy I can see in the dark again but frustrated with the blurry vision,  The doctor told me it can take up to 6 months for my vision to stabilize.  I can see better when it's not blurry but nowhere near the great vision everyone else talks about.  Hoping yours goes better than mine. ❤️.