I'm not interested in Lasik. Degraded night vision doesn't interest me. That and the fact that I'll still need reading glasses makes it basically pointless, especially as someone in my mid 30's. So I could get it done and be glasses free for maybe all of a decade if I'm really lucky? No thanks!
I've noticed my "reading vision" start to go south when I turned 47. Someone else might need them when they turn 55. Who knows. I can still read for the most part without reading glasses, but if I'm reading a book or reading very small print I need reading glasses. But 95-99% of my "awake-time" I'm NOT reading and I don't need glasses.
There's even a new procedure, "KAMRA inlay," that can eliminate the need for even reading glasses.
LASIK or LASEK do not automatically reduce/impair night vision. Lots of improvement from 10 years ago in both methods and laser technology. Depends on pupil size. If your dilated pupil becomes larger than the LASIK treatment area of the eye night vision problems (blurriness, starbursts, halos) can occur.
"Newer wavefront-guided lasers have clearly established that the vast majority of these patients can now be treated without causing problems with night vision. In fact, using the VISX wavefront guided laser that we favor, a large percentage of patients in the FDA trial actually IMPROVED in terms of night vision. This is why the US Navy and Air Force believe in this technology for its fighter pilots."
quoted taken from here. Quote is from one doctor and anecdotal in nature but worth investigating.
If you read or someone told you LASIK effects night vision 5, 10, 15 years ago, it couldn't hurt to see what the percentages of effected patients exist today. Might be lower than you thought. Plus with a newer treatment technology and if you eyes are suited for it, you may have a near-zero chance for effected night vision.
Lasik sounds like a better deal for someone right out of college, who could be glasses free for 20+ years, not someone who will need likely bifocals in a few years.
I thought this as well, that I'd only have a "few good years" before my vision went bad. But vision declines a bit from say an age of 22 to 35 years old before leveling off and stabilizing. So it might actually be a bad thing to get vision correction "too early." You correction vision would be off by your mid-30s. So mid-30s is actually a good time to do it.
And how much are your "high-end" glasses with good lenses going to cost? $200, $300, more? How long will they last? What's the total frames and lenses cost for next 20+ years? Plus cost of prescription sunglasses.
I paid $4600, 10 years ago. I did zero research of procedures and methods.
I went here for my procedure, only because I saw a magazine article that listed 125 other doctors (or their family members) that went to these doctors for their eye procedure. I figured if docs went to these docs they must be good.
Point being, it might be lower cost for you today. Better procedure with lower cost, reduced more by not needing to buy glasses, and LASIK makes more sense.
And Yes! For me the quality of life improvements of not having to wear glasses are worth the cost. I only wish I had the procedure 5 years earlier.