Refractive eye surgery is a general term for surgical procedures that can improve or correct the eye's focus by permanently changing the shape of the cornea. The cornea is the clear, front surface of the eye which bends or refracts light rays as they enter the eye.
For you to see clearly, light rays must be focused by the cornea and lens to fall precisely on the retina, a layer of light sensing cells that lines the back of the eye. The retina converts the light rays into impulses that are sent through the optic nerve to the brain, which interprets them as images. This process is very similar to the way a camera takes a picture. The cornea and lens in your eye act as the camera lens. The retina is similar to the film. If the image is not focused properly, the retina or film receives a blurry image. This condition in the human eye is known as a refractive error.
There are three types of refractive errors that can be corrected or reduced by refractive surgery.
Myopia
Myopia or nearsightedness is a refractive error that causes poor distance vision. If your eye is too long, or your cornea has too much focusing power, images focus in front the retina.
Hyperopia
Hyperopia or farsightedness is the opposite of myopia. Distant objects are clear and close up objects appear blurry. This condition is a result of an eye that is too short or a cornea that lacks the necessary refractive power to focus images on the retina.
Astigmatism
Astigmatism is a condition which blurs and distorts both distant and near objects. A normal cornea is round with even curves from side to side and top to bottom.
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