1v1mem8
Chakib
1v1mem8

Light sensitivity will depend on your starting prescription, pupil size, and also the type of LASIK equipment the ophthalmologist uses. I council all my patients that glare is usually the third, most-heard complaint after the procedure (with residual blur and mild dry eyes being the other two). But again, it also

Light sensitivity, in terms of just daylight, is constant for me. I live in a constant “recovering vampire”, as the article put it, state. I always need sunglasses or else I can get headaches in the bright sun. It’s like someone shining a flashlight directly into your face sometimes. Sunglasses are a complete solution

I had my procedure 9 years ago and I have two points: (1) My nighttime vision has gotten worse over the past 9 years and (2) my mother has terrible night vision and I’m 41, so it’s entirely possible that this was a function of aging/heredity and is unrelated to the surgery. The fact that it didn’t happen immediately

So I had a LASIK procedure done almost 10 years ago now. I suffered a lot at first with halo effects and light sensitivity. Halos being well rings of light that i would see with bright lights in the dark (ie headlights), dash lights etc. It lasted like the author said for a while (for me it was about a month) but

Hey thanks :) So some people do have issues with lights and nighttime driving. I had a little bit of that for the first week. I wasn’t seeing halos, but lights had a much stronger glow than before. It’s since gone away for me and I can now see at night and drive just fine. The way I understand it, there is a