



The primary aim of the Laservision Eye Clinic is to provide a state of the art facility to our patients using safe, proven and effective procedures. Our team of dedicated professionals are committed to the very best in laser refractive surgery.
Laservision Eye Clinic matches its reputation for excellent service and care with the highest standard of equipment to deliver outstanding results. Laservision is the only LASIK clinic in New Zealand to offer the combination of the Allegretto Eye-Q Wavelight laser (fourth generation laser technology) and the Amadeus Microkeratome. When combined and used by our expert ophthalmologists, this equipment delivers exceptional precision, superior clinical results and the highest level of safety and comfort for the patient.
fourth generation technology, exclusive in New Zealand to Laservision.
One of the keys to Laservision's success is its Allegretto Eye-Q Wavelight machine. Purchased in 2004 for $1 million dollars, it is the only one of its kind in the country and one of the first three in Australasia. Unlike older systems which are simply upgrades and add-ons to old technology, Allegretto Eye-Q Wavelight represents an entirely new design and generation of laser refractive technology and features a number of significant advances. It is also continuously software upgraded for improved results.
The Allegretto Eye-Q Wavelight has a number of unique technological features that account for its increased safety, precision and outstanding clinical results:
Glasses, contact lenses and conventional laser refractive surgery correct so-called 'lower order optical aberrations': defocus (myopia and hyperopia) and astigmatism. An optical system such as the eye may have various higher order aberrations (spherical, coma, trefoil etc) that degrade the quality of the optical image and are not corrected by glasses and contact lenses. Eye-Q Wavelight's Abberometer measures the total optical system - both lower and higher order aberrations. If significant aberrations are present this information is calculated into the laser ablation profile for a clearer and better quality image with individual customised treatment. Standard ablation profiles used by the Allegretto Eye-Q Wavelight have been calculated to minimise the amount of corneal tissue removed, and are optimised for spherical aberration. Standard Eye-Q Wavelight treatments offer improved quality and safety.
Eye-Q Wavelight's Abberometer (A-Cat) measures higher order aberrations by taking multiple measurements from different positions on the central retina through a dilated pupil. Patients having significant higher order aberrations will have this treatment using the Eye-Q Lasik platform at no extra cost. Eye-Q Wavelight's excimer laser is the only one of its kind designed specifically for wavefront guided LASIK. It is not an 'add on'. The laser procedure is carried out as a single treatment with no stopping and starting, which carries the risk of corneal drying or changing centration.
Eye-Q Wavelight is was the first and continues to be one of the few systems offering topography-guided LASIK (T-Cat). Images are taken of the cornea showing the highs, lows and irregularities of shape. The Eye-Q Wavelight Laser then reshapes the cornea back to a normal curvature and corrects refractive errors at the same time. The result is a platform that delivers outstanding clinical performance.
Irregular corneas (eg scarring, trauma, post surgery) that cannot be assessed with normal wavefront techniques are analysed by T-Cat and this information is incorporated with their treatment with the Eye-Q Lasik system. The outcomes are much improved compared to standard or wavefront treatments with such corneas.
computer-controlled precision and exceptional results.
Before laser treatment can proceed a very thin flap needs to be created in the cornea. Once this is done, and the corneal flap is gently folded back, laser treatment can commence.
The creation of the corneal flap is done by a microkeratome and is a vital part of the overall procedure. Laservision's Amadeus Microkeratome is 100% computer-controlled, not a hand-held oscillating blade like some older models of microkeratome used in New Zealand.
Blade-free technology has recently been developed which offers a new way of creating the corneal flap. Instead of a blade, a laser is used to create tiny bubbles under the cornea, which gradually join up to open the cornea. While this method may sound appealing, Laservision believes that this technology has not yet been proven to produce better results, especially when compared to the Amadeus microkeratome. Current blade-free procedures take longer and there have been reports of increased pain, slower recovery and delayed realisation of visual improvement. Given that the creation of the corneal flap is such a vital step in the overall LASIK procedure, it is important that you have a good understanding of this issue before making any decision.