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#1
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Problems with contact lenses
Can anyone recommend a solution to a problem I have where my contact
lenses quickly dry out when I'm skiing downhill. I first started skiing about 6 years ago and have found that as my skills improve and I can go faster, this problem gets worse. Last winter my wife and I were at Snowbird and after a discussion with a very helpful salesperson at the ski shop, bought a new pair of Oakley googles to try and eliminate this problem but they have had very little effect. Thanks for all suggestions. |
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#2
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My recommendation? Can you say LASIK? Had it done 5 years ago. Best money I
ever spent. I had gas permeable contact lenses which are more rigid due to how bad my eyesight was. I had terrible problems with eyes drying out whenever wind was going past - skiing/boarding, at the beach, running etc... Also sun sensitivity from it. Since LASIK it has been a blast with no problems. Now for the caution - make sure you get an experienced eye surgeon to do the surgery. It is an operation on living tissue and should only need to be done once. If you find them talking about "touching it up" later - find another. It took me 16 weeks with no contacts for my eyes to stabilize in shape. If you have soft lenses the wait should be much less. My doctor was adamant about me waiting until they had been stable for 4 weeks. And don't go to the assembly line guys, pay extra and make sure it is done correctly. The current going rate from a good eye surgeon is about $1600 -$1800 per eye here in the states for LASIK. YMMV. Good luck. "Mark Herskovitz" wrote in message om... Can anyone recommend a solution to a problem I have where my contact lenses quickly dry out when I'm skiing downhill. I first started skiing about 6 years ago and have found that as my skills improve and I can go faster, this problem gets worse. Last winter my wife and I were at Snowbird and after a discussion with a very helpful salesperson at the ski shop, bought a new pair of Oakley googles to try and eliminate this problem but they have had very little effect. Thanks for all suggestions. |
#3
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But were you near sighted or far sighted ? My eye doctor told me that I'm
still not a good candidate for Lasik because I'm far sighted . I wear extended wear contacts and ski without much problem but I do find that I have to swap out a fresh pair after every day of skiing as they get cloudy,dried up and ruined after a full day. Ron "tg" wrote in message ... My recommendation? Can you say LASIK? Had it done 5 years ago. Best money I ever spent. I had gas permeable contact lenses which are more rigid due to how bad my eyesight was. I had terrible problems with eyes drying out whenever wind was going past - skiing/boarding, at the beach, running etc... Also sun sensitivity from it. Since LASIK it has been a blast with no problems. Now for the caution - make sure you get an experienced eye surgeon to do the surgery. It is an operation on living tissue and should only need to be done once. If you find them talking about "touching it up" later - find another. It took me 16 weeks with no contacts for my eyes to stabilize in shape. If you have soft lenses the wait should be much less. My doctor was adamant about me waiting until they had been stable for 4 weeks. And don't go to the assembly line guys, pay extra and make sure it is done correctly. The current going rate from a good eye surgeon is about $1600 -$1800 per eye here in the states for LASIK. YMMV. Good luck. "Mark Herskovitz" wrote in message om... Can anyone recommend a solution to a problem I have where my contact lenses quickly dry out when I'm skiing downhill. I first started skiing about 6 years ago and have found that as my skills improve and I can go faster, this problem gets worse. Last winter my wife and I were at Snowbird and after a discussion with a very helpful salesperson at the ski shop, bought a new pair of Oakley googles to try and eliminate this problem but they have had very little effect. Thanks for all suggestions. |
#4
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I was VERY nearsighted with astigmatism. It was initially approved for those
with a prescription of -4 or less and it has been increasing as the process has improved. I believe it is now approved for use up to a -8 prescription.LASIK has now been approved for true farsightedness for a couple of years. I was lucky that my doctor had been involved since the first FDA trials of the excimer laser. The worse your eyes the more you need a good, experienced doctor. However, if you are nearing 35- 40 or over and need reading glasses, LASIK will not help that. That is not farsightedness, but presbyopia which mimics farsightedness. It is due to a natural thickening of the lens so the muscles of the eye can't focus at shorter distances. Here is a great web page that discusses that: http://www.focusers.com/focpage2.html . "Ron - NY" wrote in message t... But were you near sighted or far sighted ? My eye doctor told me that I'm still not a good candidate for Lasik because I'm far sighted . I wear extended wear contacts and ski without much problem but I do find that I have to swap out a fresh pair after every day of skiing as they get cloudy,dried up and ruined after a full day. Ron "tg" wrote in message ... My recommendation? Can you say LASIK? Had it done 5 years ago. Best money I ever spent. I had gas permeable contact lenses which are more rigid due to how bad my eyesight was. I had terrible problems with eyes drying out whenever wind was going past - skiing/boarding, at the beach, running etc... Also sun sensitivity from it. Since LASIK it has been a blast with no problems. Now for the caution - make sure you get an experienced eye surgeon to do the surgery. It is an operation on living tissue and should only need to be done once. If you find them talking about "touching it up" later - find another. It took me 16 weeks with no contacts for my eyes to stabilize in shape. If you have soft lenses the wait should be much less. My doctor was adamant about me waiting until they had been stable for 4 weeks. And don't go to the assembly line guys, pay extra and make sure it is done correctly. The current going rate from a good eye surgeon is about $1600 -$1800 per eye here in the states for LASIK. YMMV. Good luck. "Mark Herskovitz" wrote in message om... Can anyone recommend a solution to a problem I have where my contact lenses quickly dry out when I'm skiing downhill. I first started skiing about 6 years ago and have found that as my skills improve and I can go faster, this problem gets worse. Last winter my wife and I were at Snowbird and after a discussion with a very helpful salesperson at the ski shop, bought a new pair of Oakley googles to try and eliminate this problem but they have had very little effect. Thanks for all suggestions. |
#5
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Mark Herskovitz wrote:
Can anyone recommend a solution to a problem I have where my contact lenses quickly dry out when I'm skiing downhill. I first started skiing about 6 years ago and have found that as my skills improve and I can go faster, this problem gets worse. Last winter my wife and I were at Snowbird and after a discussion with a very helpful salesperson at the ski shop, bought a new pair of Oakley googles to try and eliminate this problem but they have had very little effect. It's not the goggles, it's the contacts. Consider getting some disposables and keep some spares in your pocket to swap out when they start bugging you. ---Mike Treseler |
#6
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"tg" wrote in message ...
My recommendation? Can you say LASIK? Had it done 5 years ago. Best money I ever spent. I had gas permeable contact lenses which are more rigid due to how bad my eyesight was. I had terrible problems with eyes drying out whenever wind was going past - skiing/boarding, at the beach, running etc... Also sun sensitivity from it. Since LASIK it has been a blast with no problems. Now for the caution - make sure you get an experienced eye surgeon to do the surgery. It is an operation on living tissue and should only need to be done once. If you find them talking about "touching it up" later - find another. It took me 16 weeks with no contacts for my eyes to stabilize in shape. If you have soft lenses the wait should be much less. My doctor was adamant about me waiting until they had been stable for 4 weeks. And don't go to the assembly line guys, pay extra and make sure it is done correctly. The current going rate from a good eye surgeon is about $1600 -$1800 per eye here in the states for LASIK. YMMV. Good luck. Well, I'm someone who's milage varied. When you go for LASIK, there is a lot that they gloss over or never tell you to begin with. They focus a lot on 20/20 vision but vision is a lot more than just that one aspect. Check out www.surgicaleyes.org before you consider having it done and ask a lot of questions. As for me, I live over 10,000 ft and have had frequent problems with dry eyes. If you have problems with dry eyes with contacts, my guess is that LASIK will not cure the problem. (IANAD) My biggest problem is my eyes drying out when I sleep and sticking to my eye lids. If I'm not careful about opening my eyes first thing in the morning, I can damage my cornias. It's happened at least twice while my eyes were healing after surgery. While not having to wear glasses anymore is convient, my sight will never be as good as when I had my glasses. snoig |
#7
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Mark Herskovitz wrote:
Can anyone recommend a solution to a problem I have where my contact lenses quickly dry out when I'm skiing downhill. I first started skiing about 6 years ago and have found that as my skills improve and I can go faster, this problem gets worse. Last winter my wife and I were at Snowbird and after a discussion with a very helpful salesperson at the ski shop, bought a new pair of Oakley googles to try and eliminate this problem but they have had very little effect. Thanks for all suggestions. I have no problems with my contacts, but conditions in the SoCal mountains are probably very different (7-8K and generally warm -- 40-60 degreesF) from where you are. I have Uvex wraparound goggles with ventilating foam all the way around the lens as well as holes at the sides. Never fogged up and my eyes don't dry out at all, although they do when I wear largish sunglasses while bicycling. Try asking in rec.skiing.alpine, where there are a lot of really knowledgeable people willing to share their expertise. Lasik seems a bit drastic for a problem that proper eyewear can probably solve :-( -- Cheers, Bev 11111111111111111111111111111 "To turn is to admit defeat." -- H. Grierson |
#8
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The Real Bev wrote:
Try asking in rec.skiing.alpine, where there are a lot of really knowledgeable people willing to share their expertise. Duh. I thought I read Mark's post in sci.med.vision. -- Cheers, Bev ===================================== Snowmen fall from Heaven unassembled. |
#9
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tg wrote:
(snip but ditto) The current going rate from a good eye surgeon is about $1600 -$1800 per eye here in the states for LASIK. And worth every penny, especially for skiing (snow or even melted snow in the summer -- how odd it was to see the boat when water skiing) Dave M. YMMV. Good luck. "Mark Herskovitz" wrote in message . com... Can anyone recommend a solution to a problem I have where my contact lenses quickly dry out when I'm skiing downhill. I first started skiing about 6 years ago and have found that as my skills improve and I can go faster, this problem gets worse. Last winter my wife and I were at Snowbird and after a discussion with a very helpful salesperson at the ski shop, bought a new pair of Oakley googles to try and eliminate this problem but they have had very little effect. Thanks for all suggestions. |
#10
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Dave M wrote:
tg wrote: (snip but ditto) The current going rate from a good eye surgeon is about $1600 -$1800 per eye here in the states for LASIK. And worth every penny, especially for skiing (snow or even melted snow in the summer -- how odd it was to see the boat when water skiing) If I were going to do something like that I'd ask the classiest teaching hospital I could find for a referral to a proven non-quack. I'm sensitized now because of the incompetent ophthalmologist my mom has been misdiagnosed by for the last five years... "Mark Herskovitz" wrote: Can anyone recommend a solution to a problem I have where my contact lenses quickly dry out when I'm skiing downhill. I first started skiing about 6 years ago and have found that as my skills improve and I can go faster, this problem gets worse. Last winter my wife and I were at Snowbird and after a discussion with a very helpful salesperson at the ski shop, bought a new pair of Oakley googles to try and eliminate this problem but they have had very little effect. Thanks for all suggestions. -- Cheers,Bev ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ "Why put fault tolerance in the OS, when it's already built into the User?" -- Steve Shaw, regarding Win95 |
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