My eye remained covered until in the office the next day aside from any eye drop management.
I had premature cataracts as a side effect from Lasik about 2001 I actually had two Lasik surgeries in each eye as expected because I am high index myopic--pathalogicial myopathy that remains after the corneal flattening provided me nearly 10 years without any glasses. The first Lasik after healing properly got a good targeted result. As my eyes recovered, one day I could not drive home from Ravinia without staying in the right lane from Highland Park to my dt Chcago condo because my night vision was that bad. Expected. My opthalmalogist gave me new lenses in my old frames temporarily before he was convinced my eyes were stable and he could do the second Lasik round, called an enhancement. My cornease were shaved very thin as they were flattened.
So I had cataract surgery at 58. My two eyes were done five weeks apart.
Part of it is because of my underlying pathological myopia--one eye measures about 27.5 mm the other 28 mm. Any eye surgery like this increases the risk of retinal tears. I have already had posterior vitreal detachments in both eyes--three times total now. I have also had at least two retinal tears already, one being a micro-tear that was not visible but I had flashers and I had the shrouded vision from a PVD and it took a few weeks for my vision in that eye to return to normal.
The day after I picked up my eyeglass scrip after 9.5 years without needing glasses (regression is normal in high index myopia even after Lasik), one eye hemorrhaged.
I have MMD, myopic macular degeneration in one eye. Two rounds of Avastin saved my central vision. I was old when it happened, 46. Usually Myopic MD happens 20s-40s. I got lucky with years of "good" vision.
My worse eye can read an eye chart on the best day at maybe 20/35 with a mulitple pin-hole cover filtering my visual field. But that eye really read an eye chart at 20/80 best vision without that assited device.
Anyway, once again having surgery, besides the normal risk factors of myopia with surgical interventions, I only have one good eye. I chose to do my bad eye first. That way if any measurement of corrective lens were off, not as noticeable in my bad eye.
Five weeks later, I had the second eye done. My MD did not alter the original calculation for the lens that I needed in that second eye. But he wanted to make certain that his original determinations for a lens was still the best while not prematurely starting a second surgery at the risk of complications and leaving me with a larger visual impairment needing correction.
Long story I know.
I can clarify for any that have questions.