Make PattayaMail.com your Homepage | Bookmark              SERVING THE EASTERN SEABOARD OF THAILAND             Pattaya Blatt | Chiang Mai Mail | Pattaya Mail TV
 
 CURRENT ISSUE  Vol. XX No. 33
 Friday August 17 - August 23, 2012
Pattaya Mail Web
Home
News
AutoMania
Books Review
Business
Cartoons
Community Happenings
Dining Out
Features
Heart to Heart with Hillary
Let’s go to the movies
Mail Bag
Modern Medicine
Money Matters
Obituary
On the Grapevine
Our Children
Our Community
Social Scene
Snap Shots
Sports
Sports Round-up
Staying happy in Paradise
Travel & Tourism
Information
Banglamung Cable TV
Sophon TV Guide
Movies in theatres
Embassies
Addresses and
Telephone Numbers
Back Issues
About Us
Subscribe
Updated every Friday by Saichon Paewsoongnern
 

 

SuperSight Surgery - Read all about it! Without glasses!

It is a couple of years since I wrote about SuperSight Surgery. This is a revolutionary procedure that has changed the lives of many in Pattaya, and as the news traveled throughout the world, the world traveled to Pattaya to have this life-changing operation. In fact, two of my doctor friends here in Pattaya have had this done, and both are very happy with the end result.

So, are you over 50 and using spectacles to read this article? Do you hate your reading glasses? If so, help is at hand! This is SuperSight Surgery (not to be confused with LASIK).

SuperSight Surgery is in the forefront of ophthalmic procedures. The world leader is Dr. Somchai Trakoolshokesatian and he consults out of the Bangkok Hospital Pattaya. He has been carrying out this procedure for nine years on over 3000 patients and has perfected the technique to ensure good results for each individual patient, with success and satisfaction rates of almost 100 percent.

Unfortunately, the need for reading glasses is a natural progression of aging. The first signs are the fact that you have to hold this newspaper further away to be able to read it, and you also find that you need a good light to be able to see the words clearly. Eventually you succumb and buy reading glasses, to which you become a slave. Eventually you keep one pair at home, another in the car and another in the office. And your nose gets funny indentations either side of the bridge, where the spectacles settle.

As you get older, all the ‘elastic’ tissues in your body become less pliable. Knees, lower back, fingers, neck, the list is endless. However, you have to add to that list, the lens in your eye. The fiddly little lens, supplied at birth as a standard feature, does not have a fixed focus, but under your control you can make it focus close up (to read) and then also focus at a distance. The way you do this is by ‘bending’ the lens to be able to focus on near objects. Unfortunately, as the lens becomes less pliable, the muscles in your eye become unable to bend the stiffening lens enough to produce the near point focus. The near point moves further away, until you have run out of arms, as described previously. We call this condition ‘Presbyopia’.

Unfortunately there is yet another result of aging that occurs in the lens of the eye. This is a gradual cloudiness which lowers the visual acuity, and eventually brings on blindness. This is called a cataract. So not only can you not see well enough to read the magazines, but you also begin to lose your distance vision. Welcome to the wonderful world of white sticks and Labrador dogs. Even the World Health Organization says there are currently between 12 and 15 million people blind from cataracts.

The initial method of treating this was by removal of the now optically inefficient natural lens, and attempting to return some usable vision through the introduction of very thick and heavy spectacles placed before the eye. These glasses looked as if the lenses were made from the bottom of Coca-Cola bottles (registered trade mark and all), and were just as heavy. The patient could see again, but reading required even thicker lenses, or hand-held magnifying glasses. Not all that comfortable, but beats the alternative.

So we come to the latest development in intra-ocular lenses (IOLs), where the hardened lenses are replaced by other, very special lenses. These can be focusable lenses, under the control of the patient’s own intra-ocular muscles, or multi-focal lenses, with the brain picking the necessary focus as required. This is SuperSight Surgery and with these lenses you can read your golf scorecard with your near vision, focus on the ball on the tee with your intermediate vision and then using your distance vision watch it gently arcing into the water hazard. (These new IOLs can improve your sight, but not your golf.)

If you want to know more, contact Dr Somchai and reduce your dependence on contact lenses or glasses. You will be amazed.
 



Advertisement


Speak German Confidently and Naturally in Less Than 3 Months! Click Here



 

 

 

 

  Property for Rent
  Condos & Apartments
  Bungalows - Houses - Villas

  Property for Sele
  Condos & Apartments
  Bungalows - Houses - Villas
  Articles for Sale/Rent
  Boats
  Business Opportunities
  Computers & Communications
  Pets
  Services Provided
  Staff Wanted
  Vehicles for Sale / Rent: Trucks & Cars
 

 



News
 Local News
  Features
  Business
  Travel & Tourism
  Our Community
  Our Children
  Sports
Blogs
 Auto Mania
  Dining Out
  Book Review
  Daily Horoscope
Archives
PM Mike Franklin
Classic Charity Golf
Tournament
PM Peter Cummins
Classic International
Regetta
Information
Current Movies
in Pattaya's Cinemas

 Sophon TV-Guide
 Clubs in Pattaya
News Access
Subscribe to Newspaper
About Us
Shopping
Skal
Had Yao News
Partners
Pattaya Mail TV
 Pattaya Blatt
 Chiang Mail Mail

E-mail: [email protected]
Pattaya Mail Publishing Co.Ltd.
62/284-286 Thepprasit Road, (Between Soi 6 & 8) Moo 12, Pattaya City T. Nongprue, A. Banglamung,
Chonburi 20150 Thailand 
Tel.66-38 411 240-1, 413 240-1, Fax:66-38 427 596
Copyright ? 2004 Pattaya Mail. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.