| Ragnar 2005-06-06, 8:57 am |
| That's complete misleading garbage. You are implying that the
adhesion strength of the flap is the same as the strength of the
cornea. The laminated corneal fibers of collagen have about the same
tensile strength as steel and is quite sufficient for anybody without
glaucoma or pre-existing ecstasia.
Even that 2.4% flap adhesion number is garbage. In fact, the flap
eventually adheres up to 90% of it's initial strength.
On 5 Jun 2005 11:19:27 -0700, samwayne@hotmail.com wrote:
>serebel wrote:
>
>THE SCAR HAS ONLY "2.4%" OF THE STRENGTH OF A NORMAL CORNEAL STROMA
>AND DO NOT GET STRONGER OVER TIME !!!
>
>Having just "2.4%" of its original strength after LASIK,
>
>Isn't the flap "STRONG ENOUGH" to prevent from being relifted???
>
>Isn't the flap "STRONG ENOUGH" to prevent Estasia???
>
>Stop making up lies and sending out misinformation.
>
>SEREBEL, you are NOT to be trusted.
|