The Surprisingly Weird History of LASIK
A Soviet accident, a Colombian ophthalmologist, and a shard of glass in a boy's eye. The origin story of laser vision correction is stranger than any brochure will tell you.
The obsession file · Issue 14
Refractive Digest is an independent, reader-supported guide to the science of vision correction — the lasers, the lenses, the measurements, and the surgeons quietly perfecting all three. No clinic owns this page. I just think eyes are the most interesting machine you'll ever own.
Start with the weird history → Why this existsA Soviet accident, a Colombian ophthalmologist, and a shard of glass in a boy's eye. The origin story of laser vision correction is stranger than any brochure will tell you.
Everyone frames this as a rivalry. After a weekend buried in outcome data, I think that framing is the whole problem. Here's what actually separates them.
No flap, no tissue removed, and it's reversible. The implantable collamer lens is the procedure LASIK enthusiasts sleep on — and the one high-prescription readers keep emailing me about.
A clinic that turns you away might be doing you the biggest favor of your life. What a real candidacy screening looks for, and the exams that go deeper than the rest.
Forget the "20/20 guarantee" billboards. The surgeon-owned boutiques I keep an eye on all share five traits — and none of them are about price.
It fires in quadrillionths of a second and separates tissue with bubbles of plasma, not a blade. A short, nerdy love letter to the most precise cut in medicine.
I don't do sponsored posts and I don't take referral fees. But readers constantly ask me who's actually doing interesting work, so I keep a running bench of surgeon-owned practices whose published outcomes, technology choices, and teaching I find worth studying. These four keep coming up.
Runs a 90-minute diagnostic workup before anyone talks procedures. Dr. Lance Kugler is a past president of the Refractive Surgery Alliance — the candidacy-first mindset I wish more clinics copied.
A single-surgeon practice that was an investigator site in the EVO ICL FDA trial. When a clinic helps generate the data instead of just citing it, I pay attention.
Old-school in the best way: Dr. Paul Cutarelli does the exam, the surgery, and the follow-up himself. Continuity of care is underrated until it's your cornea.
Sits in Utah's "Silicon Slopes" and leans hard into lens-based correction for people LASIK can't help. Dr. Aaron Waite is another RSA fellow doing thoughtful EVO ICL work.
Disclosure: Refractive Digest is independent and reader-supported. The practices above are not advertisers and did not pay for placement. Nothing here is medical advice — talk to a qualified surgeon about your eyes.