After Almost 9 Months post LASIK, Ghosting Persists
Ok, so I had LASIK 8 and a half months ago, mini-monovision, left eye is left only with -0.5, for reading up close, and the right dominant eye is fully corrected. Pre op -3.25 -1.00 cyl OD, and -3.00 and -1.25 or -1.5 cyl OS. In the beginning, I had interference between eyes, which is normal until the brain adjusts to mini-monovision, and then I was seeing clearly up close while looking at the phone, and without ghosting, and very little ghosting was present in the distance, also, but the mid-range was kinda more blurry. Then, after 4-5 months, I saw consistently clear up close, mid-range improved too, and all seemed fine. Halo and starburst started to diminish, and I felt that I rarely needed drops.
Then 5-6 months later, even tho I was still using eye drops from time to time, I started experiencing ghosting more often, distance or not, the letters would start to drop, but dynamically, dropping then going back to normal, then seeing 30 minutes normally, one hour, then again ghosting, etc. Via day, I can see really well, even at night, a lot of details, strong contours, textures, etc, so it is highly unlikely that some left astigmatism or whatsoever, because when I see clearly for an hour or two, I can see really sharp, small prints in the distance of some menu, etc.
But my question is: has anyone experienced stabilization of ghosting after almost 9 months? Even when I do experience ghosting, when I squint slightly, it goes away, then comes back; it's kinda dynamic when it appears and disappears. Drops do not change that much. It is annoying...I know that for most people it goes away within 10 months, for some after 3, but still. I do not feel that my eyes are super dry, even tho they may be.
I know that when I had eyeglasses with the wrong astigmatism correction, or without them, I would not see the sharp contours of objects. It was a great test, until I got the last pair of eyeglasses, and it all clicked. And I do see, as I said, sharp contours, so I know that it doesn't have anything to do with dioptry or astigmatism.
Any insights or successful stories that resolved over time?