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It happens to everyone sooner or later: You can’t read
a book unless you hold it at arm’s length. You have
to ask a friend to help you peruse a menu. Oliver Besnoin
noticed his vision was headed south the day the stock market
data he obsessively watches scroll across his computer screen
was simply too small to read. Even so, he balked at wearing
bifocals. “I was not ready for that. That’s
not me,” says the 47-year-old former fasion model,
who races motorcycles in his spare time.
Besnoin’s life suddenly came back into focus last month
after he had a surgical procedure called Conductive Keratoplasty,
or CK. Approved by the FDA on March 16, the new technique uses
radio waves to remedy the common age-induced vision loss known
as Presbyopia—the inability to decipher small type,
which sends baby boomers reaching for their reading glasses.
Now when he rides his motorcycle, “I can read the
instruments better,” says Besnoin, who lives in Hermosa
Beach, Calif.

CK is not cheap—it costs up to $2,500 and is not covered
by insurance. It only works for those who didn’t need
glasses before they turned 40 and has not been approved for
nearsightedness (Myopia), one of the most common vision problems.
Nevertheless, experts predict the market for the new and relatively
painless method will be huge. “It’s another option
for patients who want to avoid reading glasses,” says
Harvard Medical School clinical instructor Kernest Kornmehl,
author of an article on CK that is due to appear in an upcoming
issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. Unlike LASIK,
which uses a laser to slice and reshape the cornea, CK
doesn’t involve cutting (see box). Instead, a tiny probe
applies radio waves in a circular pattern just below the surface
of the eye. The radio waves act like a belt reshaping the cornea
into a perfect circle, improving its contour and allowing light
to focus properly on the back of the eye.

Ophthalmologist Robert Maloney, 46, who has appeared on ABC’s
Extreme Makeover and performed LASIK on celebs like Cindy
Crawford and Michael Douglas, says he was initially doubtful that
such a non-invasive procedure could do any good. But since
participating in the Food and Drug Administration’s two-year
clinical trial, he has begun offering the treatment at his office
in Los Angeles. “Somebody said to me that reading glasses
are God’s way of preventing us from lying about our
age,” says Maloney. Now he believes that scientific
innovations will eventually make all glasses obsolete.
“You’ll only see them in museums,” he
says. |