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Health & Medical News

Is Using Lasers on Eye Gunk Worth It?

Tuesday, January 30, 2007 6:53:56 PM
By MATTHEW BARAKAT

In this undated ophthalmic  photograph released by Dr. John Karickhoff ,a patient's eye is seen after its ring shaped eye floater was removed. The floaters in both eyes had been preventing the musical conductor from seeing notes because they criss-crossed when he looked from the musical score to the orchestra and back to the score, the doctor said.  (AP Photo/John Karickhoff) FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) - Some people call them floaters. Eye doctors call them "vitreous opacities." Emily Flynn called hers "a little fuzzball," and she flew halfway around the world to have it removed. After more than 100 pinpoint zaps from a laser beam during a half-hour visit to a northern Virginia office park, the fuzzball was gone, obliterated within the clear, gelatinous goo that fills the eyeball.

The surgeon, John Karickhoff, has done the same procedure more than 1,400 times over the past 15 years and claims a success rate of better than 90 percent, with minimal risk of complications. Still, many ophthalmologists have never heard of the procedure — and most would recommend against it. The procedure has drawn regulatory scrutiny in Florida.

Nearly everybody has floaters or will develop them at some point in life, especially older and nearsighted people. Sometimes shaped like specks or snakes, they float through a person's field of vision, and are most easily seen when you look against a light background like a blue sky or a white wall.


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