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Send message Joined: 23 Feb 08 Posts: 2497 |
OBW I wasn't laser, a bit more for me, scalpel open the eyeball, yank out the lens, put in a replacement, stitch it up. Then drops, lots of drops, 5 different ones, up to 4 times a day to start. Also have a followup in a few hours myself. They are going to pull out that stitch.Have to ask, are you then completely out? Or do you see it all coming and going, so to speak, with only local anesthetic? You are aware and awake - you have to be for part of it - but they have you hooked up with gas and drip. Lots of local of course. Looking back I think when they did the first eye a couple of minutes may have been out because I remember more from the second, but it also was a different anesthesiologist. You are out of the OR in 15 to 20 minutes, so it is very quick. You don't really see much, the cut is done outside of where you can see and they aren't coming at you in the face with the blade, they come in from the side while they have you look the opposite way. Once they start removing the cataract, you aren't seeing anything but the light of the microscope the surgeon is using. Since I had astigmatism, the surgeon before the operation had to put a couple of dots with a pen on my eyeball, a zero line so he could line up the new lens. It sounds much worse than it is. If they ever tell you you need it, go for it. You will be glad you did. |
Send message Joined: 25 May 09 Posts: 1302 |
When I was an industrial first aider eye injuries were the one thing I would always look for someone else to be first on the scene. Head, blood, guts, gore no problems, but eyes and I was on the floor. |
Send message Joined: 12 Jun 09 Posts: 2106 |
Good for you. I've always maintained that as many people as possible hold a First Aid certificate. Aside from RTA's, there is always silly accidents at work, home & while out and about. Unfortunately my current one expires in November & may be the last one. With no longer being an employee, I cannot justify the £322.80 inclusive the Red Cross wants. However if the tax man will allow it :-) There is an SJA office in town & may see what their costs are, if anything like the Red Cross... |
Send message Joined: 23 Feb 08 Posts: 2497 |
It sounds much worse than it is.Sounds horrific. As to pain, worse felt was something like a little grit in the eye for a few seconds. They know how to make sure you don't feel anything. Did not have to take any pain meds after. One of the drops is a topical Tylenol though. Teeth cleaning at the dentist is worse! |
Send message Joined: 29 Aug 05 Posts: 15571 |
Autumn cleaning of the forums done. "When requesting help" thread rewritten. New Alpha tester thread made. Destickied lots of old threads. Let's keep it Klean. :) |
Send message Joined: 8 Mar 16 Posts: 177 |
It sounds much worse than it is. What you don't see is the surgeon coming at you from the side swinging the scalpel in a stabbing motion with a massive grin on their face. I may have had too much coffee today. |
Send message Joined: 23 Feb 08 Posts: 2497 |
It sounds much worse than it is. No the consent form is terrifying. It says something to the effect of first we will blind you. Then we will attempt to restore your sight, but we don't may any promise. |
Send message Joined: 29 Aug 05 Posts: 15571 |
You don't really see much, the cut is done outside of where you can see and they aren't coming at you in the face with the blade, they come in from the side while they have you look the opposite way.Kinda be glad. I read one of the books an uncle of mine wrote about his youth and how at the time he was slowly going blind. He is fully blind, has been for over 50 years. I don't remember him being anything but blind. He's got two fake eyes, because his own eyeballs started to rot. Anyway, before the time that he actually was blind, the doctors tried to repair the damage done to his eyes and for that they injected him into his eyeballs with every kind of new medicine they could at the time (read 1950s). That meant he had to keep his eyes open and they'd inject him straight through his iris in the back of the eyeball. He'd see the needle come at him and go into his eye. We've all seen those things happen in thrillers and horror movies... he had it done to himself. Twice a week. For more than two years. That he's still sane... |
Send message Joined: 23 Feb 08 Posts: 2497 |
You don't really see much, the cut is done outside of where you can see and they aren't coming at you in the face with the blade, they come in from the side while they have you look the opposite way.Kinda be glad. I read one of the books an uncle of mine wrote about his youth and how at the time he was slowly going blind. He is fully blind, has been for over 50 years. I don't remember him being anything but blind. He's got two fake eyes, because his own eyeballs started to rot. My boss goes in every 6 weeks to get injections in the eyeball. I am thankful. |
Send message Joined: 25 May 09 Posts: 1302 |
Jord, I hope you've got your hat properly secured as young Aileen is going to be knocking on your door soon, and she's a rough bit of stuff... |
Send message Joined: 29 Aug 05 Posts: 15571 |
You call her Aileen, the Germans call him Sebastian, both have song references. It has been knocking on our windows since 6am, but it can't get in. |
Send message Joined: 5 Oct 06 Posts: 5130 |
Hasn't everyone in that 1970 video put on weight? I'm sure they used to be much skinnier. |
Send message Joined: 29 Aug 05 Posts: 15571 |
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Send message Joined: 25 May 09 Posts: 1302 |
Glad to see your hat stayed Jord :-) I've not met that site before, and am impressed with the way it shows how the wind swirls around in the UK before thumping into mainland Europe. |
Send message Joined: 29 Aug 05 Posts: 15571 |
Windy.com is my new favorite weather related site, because it shows the winds all over the world including a 10 day prognosis. All eyes are on what José is going to do, of course. |
Send message Joined: 5 Oct 06 Posts: 5130 |
... am impressed with the way it shows how the wind swirls around in the UK before thumping into mainland Europe.And how it channels down through the Aire Gap. Fortunately, the people who founded my village a thousand years ago knew to build in a fold of the hills, sheltered from the north-west. |
Send message Joined: 25 May 09 Posts: 1302 |
Unlike builders of a new marina who stuck it on an embankment, having to import material to construct the "dam" and bed level so it isn't too deep. I had a look at it recently with a view to moving, on a still day one certainly had to hang onto one's hat so what its like on a windy day like today is anyone's guess. |
Send message Joined: 29 Aug 05 Posts: 15571 |
Heard in a jingle on the radio: R.O.C.K. ... the C is silent. Uh, yes... but why then use it in places like this? |
Send message Joined: 25 May 09 Posts: 1302 |
Heard in a jingle on the radio: But we could spell "rock": roc rok roqu rocqu But we don't, beacos it's spelt "rock" - simple rool of Inglish a wurd is spelt as itt is spellt |
Send message Joined: 12 Jul 14 Posts: 656 |
Can a needful thing be a question? *ask it before anyone says no* For a birth certificate to be valid - does it have to have your full name in the readable format of: first; Mine doesn't - and suddenly - that's being made out to be a problem :[ There is my first and second name - only ... then my parents' full names, even my mother's maiden name - but no Me Me Meeeeeeee. Just Me Me and then Them Them Them. |
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