The continuing saga of my recovery from my 2nd retinal detachment/reattachment surgery in my left eye. I'm currently at week 4 in the new recovery. Last week, I reported being able to glimpse a bit of the world more or less focused, above the meniscus of the bubble (actually below, because the eye image is backasswards), but too high to catch the center of vision, and predicted that by this week the center of vision would be in the focused zone (looking forward, not up or down), and I'd be able to report on how it was looking.
I was right (remember, I've been here once before). I can now see forward with a band that includes the fovea. It ain't pretty. As before, the vision is slanted to my right, maybe worse than before, and somewhat distorted, like on crumpled paper. If I work at it a bit, I can get both eyes to agree on the location and shape of an object directly in front, but away from the center, not so much. It's a bit disorienting to try to put both views together, so I close the left eye a lot. As I was told to expect, as a result of the rubber band around it, the left eye is now considerably more near sighted that it was, with its unaided focal distance of about a foot. It's not really very much use for reading at this point, although it can, alone, if necessary.
I really have no more pain from the rubber band (excuse me scleral buckle) they put around the eye to help the retina stick, just a slight feeling that there's something back there. I'm still a little leary of lifting heavy weights or bending down too far, it might cause a twinge of pain.
In theory, I did my last round of eye drops this morning. Now it's on it's own to continue improving. I'll continue with the antibiotic salve for a while though. It seems to help.
Barring the unforeseen, I don't expect a dramatic change by next week, the window of focused vision will widen, but since the bubble isn't expected to entirely dissipate for at least two or more weeks, the zone of better vision should be wider, and the two eyes maybe working better together, I hope.
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