PROCEDURE 1

Refractive Surgery

Stop managing your vision with glasses.
Recover effortless autonomy.

What is Refractive Surgery?

How Does It Improve Visual Health?

Refractive surgery corrects the shape of the cornea — the clear front surface of the eye — so that light focuses precisely on the retina instead of slightly in front of it or behind it. The result is that the eye itself does the work that glasses and contacts have been doing on your behalf. The correction is permanent.

Several techniques achieve this. LASIK uses a laser to reshape the corneal tissue under a thin protective flap. SMILE is a newer approach that works entirely within the cornea without creating a flap — preferred for certain corneal profiles and for people who participate in contact sports. Which technique is appropriate depends on your corneal thickness, curvature, prescription strength, and the stability of your vision over the past two years. This is what the initial evaluation determines.

WHO THIS IS FOR

Adults with stable myopia, hyperopia, or astigmatism who have been dependent on glasses or contacts for daily function and want a permanent correction. Most candidates are between 22 and 45. Prescription must have been stable for at least two years.

The Impact in your life

With Vision — Reclaim The Hours

Add it up.
The morning routine. back into the case in the evening. Cleaning solution that ran out. A lens moving at the wrong moment. The backup pair in your desk drawer, your bag, your glove compartment. Glasses and contacts are a management system for a problem that, for the right candidate, can simply be solved. After surgery, the problem is gone. What was background noise for years goes quiet.
The broader effect is harder to quantify.
Swimming without calculation. Waking up and seeing the room. Rain without streaks. A workout that is just a workout. These are not dramatic improvements in the clinical sense — but they accumulate. Over months and years, the absence of the daily management has a weight that most people underestimate until it lifts.

This is the foundation of SEEING CLEARLY
— The presence that comes from eyes that simply work.

The Cost of Delay

Your prescription will not improve on its own

Myopia typically stabilizes in the mid-twenties for most people, though for some it continues to progress slowly into the thirties and forties. A prescription that is still changing is not a good candidate for surgery — the correction would need to account for a moving target. But a prescription that has been stable for two or more years is a solved problem waiting to be addressed.

Extended contact lens wear over years increases the cumulative risk of corneal infections and oxygen deprivation. These are not common, but they are not trivial either. Each additional year in lenses is another year of that risk accumulating. For people with contact lens intolerance — the dryness, the discomfort, the days when lenses simply are not an option — surgery removes the exposure entirely.

The right time to address a stable, correctable refractive error is when you are ready to stop managing it.

Other Options

What the alternatives offer — and where they stop

Glasses and contact lenses:

Glasses and contacts correct the refractive error at the surface — they do not change the eye itself. They require ongoing maintenance, replacement, and daily management. For some people this is entirely acceptable. For others it has become a source of genuine friction. The distinction matters because surgery is only worth considering when the friction of correction exceeds the friction of the surgical process itself.

Implantable Collamer Lens (ICL):

For candidates whose corneas are too thin for LASIK or SMILE, or whose prescriptions are outside the range laser surgery can address, an implantable lens placed inside the eye is an alternative. It achieves similar outcomes through a different mechanism. The evaluation determines which approach, if either, applies.

The assessment is not a step toward surgery
— it is a step toward knowing which option is actually right for your specific eyes.

Benefits

What You Gain

  • Permanent correction of myopia, hyperopia, or astigmatism for qualified candidates.
  • Elimination or significant reduction of dependence on glasses and contacts.
  • Fast recovery — most patients return to normal activity within 24–48 hours.
  • High satisfaction rate among candidates who meet selection criteria

considerations

What You Should Know

  • Dry eye symptoms are common in the weeks following surgery and resolve for most patients [Dr. Ossma to confirm typical duration]
  • Halos or glare around lights at night may occur initially and diminish over several months [Dr. Ossma to confirm typical resolution timeline]
  • A small percentage of patients require an enhancement procedure to achieve the target correction [Dr. Ossma to provide rate]
  • Not all candidates qualify — corneal thickness, prescription range, and stability are all determining factors

Section 6 CLOSING LINE

ACF Before/After Gallery

ACF Patient Story

VISION

Your Personalized Path Starts Here

Are You a Candidate?

90-second assessment via WhatsApp. Match your pillar to your procedure in minutes.