LASIK Guides

LASIK vs. Cataract Surgery: Planning for Your 50s and 60s

Updated 7/2/2025

Two paths, two tissues: LASIK reshapes the cornea; cataract surgery replaces the lens. Plan with both in mind.

At a glance

  • In your 50s and 60s, lens changes often drive symptoms; LASIK may still help selected eyes.
  • Prior LASIK complicates—but does not prevent—future cataract IOL calculations.
  • RLE or premium cataract IOLs can address presbyopia more directly than corneal laser for some.

Scenario planning

  1. Clear lenses, cornea‑driven blur
  • If the lens is clear and corneas are favorable, LASIK/PRK/SMILE remain options.
  • Expect readers unless you choose monovision; discuss night‑driving trade‑offs.
  1. Early lens changes with night glare
  • Lens‑based solutions may address the root cause and offer presbyopia options.
  • Consider extended depth‑of‑focus or multifocal IOLs after a candidacy discussion.
  1. High hyperopia or mixed prescriptions
  • Corneal range may be limited; lens‑based options often provide better quality and stability.

Questions that guide the choice

  • What’s the dominant source of blur: cornea, tear film, or lens?
  • How important is near vision without readers?
  • How soon might cataract surgery be advisable regardless of LASIK?

If you choose LASIK now

  • Keep pre‑LASIK records to aid future IOL calculations
  • Manage dry eye proactively to preserve measurement accuracy later
  • Expect a detailed cataract planning visit down the road

The best plan balances today’s clarity with tomorrow’s lens realities—prefer surgeons fluent in both corneal and lens‑based refractive options.

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