Preliminary results indicate that the concept of topographic-assisted LASIK is feasible. However, most eyes were undercorrected and had regression. One reason might be that corneal topography underestimated corneal irregularity, causing significant undercorrection.
Our results indicate that LASIK is an effective procedure in the correction of high myopia. The incidence of scar formation and regression is considerably lower than after PRK.
The rate of complications in LASIK is low, and intraoperative complications did not cause any significant loss of vision. We observed keratectasia in one eye, which suggests that deep ablations should be avoided, which limits the amount of correction possible.
LASIK is an accurate, effective and stable procedure for correcting myopia of -5 to -10 D. Results are less precise in myopia up to -15 D, and some visual loss occurs in a number of patients. In myopia > -15 D, results are not satisfactory because of poor accuracy and low stability.
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