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Lasik

The Eye Laser Miracle: The Complete Guide to Better Vision

Andrew I. Caster, M.D.

$35

Paperback

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English
Ballantine Books Inc.
15 November 2008
THE EYE LASER MIRACLE is the guide for anyone who wants better vision, and especially for those with nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism who would like to be rid of their glasses and contact lenses - forever!

Now you can have normal vision all the time, thanks to excimer laser treatment-commonly known as PRK and LASIK-a painless procedure that takes less than five minutes. Dr. Andrew I. Caster, one of the leading physicians in the permanent correction of nearsightedness, astigmatism, and farsightedness, takes you through the entire process-including the experiences of patients who have undergone the procedure and their incredible joy at suddenly being able to see again.

. What are the differences between the PRK, LASIK, and RK procedures, and which is right for me? . What are the most common side effects of excimer laser treatment? . How do I judge whether a doctor is sufficiently qualified to perform excimer laser treatment? . Will the procedure be painful? . When can I fully resume normal daily activities such as driving and reading? . Will eye laser treatment stop my eyes from getting worse? . How well has the FDA monitored this technique? . How many people have successfully undergone the procedure?

The Eye Laser Miracle is the guide for anyone who wants better vision.
By:  
Imprint:   Ballantine Books Inc.
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   Revised edition
Dimensions:   Height: 211mm,  Width: 140mm,  Spine: 9mm
Weight:   153g
ISBN:   9780345507358
ISBN 10:   0345507355
Pages:   160
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Dr. Andrew I. Caster graduated from Harvard University, received his medical education at Harvard Medical School, and his ophthalmology training at the UCLA Jules Stein Eye Institute. Today Dr. Caster is in practice in the Los Angeles area with an office in Beverly Hills. He lives in Southern California with his wife, Jacqueline, and their children, Bryce and Jocelyn.

Reviews for Lasik: The Eye Laser Miracle: The Complete Guide to Better Vision

Children have often figured prominently in Beattie's fiction, though they have seldom been as young as Will, the five-year-old object of inquiry of her first novel since Love Always (1985): it's a kind of contemporary version of James' What Maisie Knew in which Beattie - with mixed results - places Will in a tangle of divorced parents and their new spouses and lovers and patrons. Though the primary emphasis here is on the mother, Jody, and the father, Wayne, italicized linking passages - little essays on childhood - underscore Will's central position in the triptych. Jody and Wayne divorced some time ago, after Wayne walked. Mother and son now live in Charlottesville, Virginia, where Jody works as a wedding photographer; her secret work - her own photographs - have become so good that devoted lover Mel is arranging her first show with Haveabud, an epicene conniver and New York gallery-owner. As Jody breaks into the big time, so Mel gives his all to raising Will. He drives him to Florida to visit Wayne; en route, Will has his first intimation of evil when he catches Haveabud fooling around with another small boy in a motel bathroom. Good-looking, promiscuous Wayne turns out to be a major-league flake; he is already thinking of leaving his third wife, Corky, a good-hearted soul who wishes she were Will's mother. While the childless Corky and Mel demonstrate their fine nurturing qualities, Wayne and Jody fail Will shockingly - Wayne by causing a chickens-coming-home-to-roost scene in which Will must see his father led away in handcuffs, Jody by refusing to listen to Will's revelations about her manic mentor Haveabud. The familiar Beattie world of dislocations, where love is like a feather in the breeze, is rendered awkwardly here. The scenes of Haveabud's pederasty and Wayne's arrest seem forced and arbitrary; the childhood essays are irritatingly portentous; and it's not until Florida that Beattie hits her stride. Still, her quirky humor and her dialogue, wickedly good, just about make the trip worthwhile. (Kirkus Reviews)


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