Skip to main content
    Patient Guides

    How should I prepare for LASIK surgery?

    Jan 08, 20258 min read

    **Short answer:** This guide gives you the complete, India-specific answer in plain language. Most online articles either oversimplify or overcomplicate this — here's the practical, India-specific answer you actually need. In this guide we cover what 'How should I prepare for LASIK surgery' really means in practical, India-specific terms — including timelines, evidence and what to do next.

    The Underlying Mechanism Explained

    Pre-LASIK evaluation includes corneal topography (Pentacam), pachymetry (corneal thickness), aberrometry, dry eye workup, dilated retina exam and refraction with and without cycloplegia. Total time: about 90 minutes.

    From a clinical standpoint, the cornea is one of the most precisely measured structures in the human body — modern Pentacam and OCT scanners measure thickness to within 5 microns of accuracy. This precision is what enables surgeons to predict outcomes for each individual patient rather than relying on population averages alone. Every recommendation given before LASIK is grounded in your specific corneal map, refractive stability, tear film quality and pupil behaviour in dim light.

    The Detailed Answer — Point by Point

    Here are the specific points that matter most for this question:

    • Stop soft contact lenses 7 days before screening, hard/RGP lenses 3 weeks before. Avoid eye makeup on the screening day so corneal scans aren't disrupted.

    These points come from current clinical practice across high-volume LASIK centres in India, FDA outcome data, and our own follow-up records. They're not theoretical — they're what actually plays out in real patient timelines.

    Practical Guidance for Indian Patients

    Patients in Kolkata, Lucknow and Mumbai particularly benefit from understanding this because of the specific environmental factors — air pollution (PM2.5 spikes in winter), heavy office AC, 8–10 hour daily screen exposure, and dust-heavy outdoor commutes — that affect post-LASIK comfort and healing speed.

    Our standard guidance is: stay indoors with sunglasses for the first 48 hours, use lubricant drops every 1–2 hours during screen time for the first month, avoid two-wheeler riding for at least a week (wind exposure dries the cornea rapidly), and stay well hydrated. These small adjustments make a meaningful difference to the recovery experience.

    Common Myths to Ignore

    Myths we hear weekly that are simply wrong:

    • 'LASIK results wear off in 5 years' — The corneal change is permanent. Stable results last for decades in 90%+ of patients.
    • 'Only young people can do LASIK' — Patients in their 40s, 50s and even 60s undergo LASIK successfully every day; the technology is simply tailored to age (e.g., blended vision after 40).
    • 'You can't do LASIK with high power' — LASIK works up to about –10 D myopia and +6 D hyperopia. Beyond that, ICL is the better option — but you're still a candidate for vision correction.
    • 'Insurance covers LASIK' — Standard mediclaim usually doesn't, because it's classified as elective. Always confirm with your provider in writing.

    What You Should Do Next

    To get a clear, personalised answer:

    • Book a free LASIK suitability test that includes corneal topography (Pentacam), pachymetry, dry eye assessment and dilated retina exam
    • Ask the surgeon to explain your specific candidacy in plain language — not just 'you're suitable'
    • Compare 2–3 technology recommendations (Femto, Contoura, SMILE, InnovEyes) with the cost-benefit of each laid out clearly
    • Confirm post-op follow-up schedule — a minimum of 4–6 visits over 6 months should be included in your package
    • Verify enhancement policy — most reputable centres offer free touch-ups within 12 months if your prescription drifts
    • Check the laser platform age — under 5 years is preferable; older platforms may not deliver the precision of newer-generation lasers

    Expert Insight

    Patients often fixate on rare risks they read online, while overlooking the daily-life risks of contact lens wear — corneal infections, dry eye, hygiene issues. LASIK should be evaluated against these realities, not against an imaginary risk-free baseline.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Take the Next Step

    Take our free 60-second online eye test or call our LASIK counsellor to get a personalised opinion on your candidacy.

    Related Resources

    Get Started Today

    Ready to Ditch Your Glasses?

    Fill in your details and our LASIK specialist will call you within 30 minutes to answer all your questions and help you choose the right procedure.

    • ✓ 100% Free consultation
    • ✓ No-obligation evaluation
    • ✓ EMI options available

    Get Your Free LASIK Evaluation

    Our specialist will call you within 30 minutes

    Protected by reCAPTCHA — Privacy & Terms

    👁️
    Ishika
    🟢 Online  |  Typically replies instantly