High myopia increases demands on corneal tissue removal. But safety is not determined solely by the dioptre number.
It depends on how that correction interacts with corneal thickness and biomechanical reserve.
Biomechanical studies show that the anterior stroma contributes disproportionately to tensile strength. ¹ Excessive anterior tissue removal weakens the cornea’s ability to resist intraocular pressure stress.
Ectasia risk modelling demonstrates that high percent tissue altered is independently associated with postoperative instability. ²
Even if topography appears normal, removing too much anterior stromal tissue can shift a stable eye toward long-term weakness.
At Blue Fin Vision®, evaluation includes:
- Baseline thickness
- Ablation depth projection
- Residual stromal bed
- Percent tissue altered
- Posterior surface assessment
When safety thresholds are breached, proceeding would create a preventable risk.
High myopia requires not enthusiasm for correction, but precision in judgement.
Some eyes tolerate laser safely. Others should not undergo corneal thinning at all.
The difference lies in structural reserve.
References
- Randleman JB, Dawson DG, Grossniklaus HE, et al. Depth-dependent cohesive tensile strength in corneas. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2008;49(10):4031-4036.
- Santhiago MR, et al. Percent tissue altered and ectasia risk. Am J Ophthalmol. 2014;158(1):87-95.
- Randleman JB, et al. Risk assessment for ectasia. Ophthalmology. 2008;115(1):37-50.
Related Topics
- Who Should Not Have Laser Eye Surgery, and Why Saying “No” Can Protect Your Vision
- Why Thin Corneas Can Make Laser Eye Surgery Unsafe
- Percent Tissue Altered (PTA): The Biomechanical Threshold That Can Rule Out LASIK
- Why Normal Topography Isn’t Always Enough to Clear You for Laser Eye Surgery
- Keratoconus: Why Laser Eye Surgery Is Contraindicated
- Subclinical Keratoconus: When a Borderline Scan Still Means No
- Can I Have Laser Eye Surgery If I Have Dry Eyes?
- Severe Dry Eye and LASIK: When Symptoms Make Surgery Too Risky
- Is My Prescription Too High for Safe Laser Eye Surgery?
- High Myopia and LASIK: Understanding the Tissue Safety Limits
- Laser Eye Surgery and Retinal Disease: When We Must Defer
- Why Active Macular Pathology Is a Red Flag for Laser Vision Correction
- Am I Too Young for Laser Eye Surgery? Understanding Age and Prescription Stability
- Unstable Refraction: Why We Often Say “Not Yet”
- Is Laser Eye Surgery Safe If You Play Contact or Combat Sports?
- LASIK and High-Impact Jobs: When Trauma Risk Tips the Balance
- Large Pupils, Night-Time Halos and LASIK: When We Advise Against Surgery
- Autoimmune Disease, Systemic Medications and LASIK: Who Should Not Proceed?
- I Was Told I’m Not Suitable for Laser – What Safe Alternatives Do I Have?
- Why a Perfect Eye Test Doesn’t Guarantee You’re Suitable for Laser
- Is My Prescription Still Changing? Why Stability Matters Before Laser Eye Surgery
- Pregnancy, Breastfeeding and Laser Eye Surgery: Why We Defer
- Monocular Patients: When One Seeing Eye Changes the Threshold
- Previous Corneal Surgery: Why Prior Procedures Change Suitability