Бидэнтэй холбогдож байгаад баярлалаа!
Бид таны хүсэлтийг хүлээн авлаа.
Эрэлт их байгаа тул бидний хариу өгөх хугацаа ажлын 1-2 хоног болж магадгүй.
Бид таны тэвчээр, ойлголтод талархаж байна.
Бидэнтэй холбогдож байгаад баярлалаа!
Бид таны хүсэлтийг хүлээн авлаа.
Эрэлт их байгаа тул бидний хариу өгөх хугацаа ажлын 1-2 хоног болж магадгүй.
Бид таны тэвчээр, ойлголтод талархаж байна.
BGN Мэндээлэлч
2026.07.02Hello. This is the nursing team at BGN Eye Clinic Jamsil.
Interacting daily with many patients around their 50s in our clinics and diagnostic rooms, we consistently observe one common desire: a profound eagerness to return to active social lives and vibrant hobbies as quickly as possible.
Patients frequently ask us, "Nurse, I have an important social gathering next week. Is it okay if I dye my hair and get a perm?" or "Now that my surgery is over, can I head straight to the golf course this weekend?"
While presbyopia and cataract surgeries yield excellent visual outcomes, managing subtle, everyday physical irritants during the early postoperative phase dictates the final quality of your vision. To ensure your safe recovery, we have compiled a definitive timeline addressing the three most frequently asked questions regarding returning to daily life.
Before reviewing your routine checklist, our nursing team highlights this fundamental rule. Presbyopia and cataract surgery is a highly sophisticated internal procedure where your eye's natural crystalline lens is replaced with a premium multifocal intraocular lens (IOL).
While the delicate internal ocular structures heal and the multifocal IOL stabilizes into its permanent position, the most dangerous risk is inadvertently rubbing, pressing, or bumping your eye while asleep. Therefore, you must wear the protective eye shield provided by our clinic for at least 1 to 2 weeks at bedtime.
Clinical Insight: To monitor and support the optimal recovery and stabilization of internal ocular tissues, we maintain a rigorous, high-precision follow-up diagnostic system for every patient.
While individual timelines may vary based on corneal health and personal healing speeds, these general guidelines ensure that your intraocular lens settles perfectly.
Important Note: The schedules outlined below serve as standard medical reference baselines. Your exact timeline may be adjusted depending on the specific surgical technique used, your unique recovery status, and the professional judgment of your attending surgeon.
Safe Hygiene Resumption Timeline
This is often the very first challenge patients encounter when preparing to return to work or step outside immediately after surgery. For the first 3 days, it is absolutely vital that no water or soap enters the operated eye. Gently wipe your face with a damp washcloth, completely avoiding the periorbital area. When washing your hair during the first week, it is safest to tilt your head backward; similar to a salon shampoo chair, and have someone assist you.
Hair Styling Resumption Milestone
This is the area that causes the most anxiety for our middle-aged patients. The harsh chemicals found in hair dyes and perming solutions, alongside the stinging ammonia vapors they release, can severely irritate the healing cornea and conjunctiva, triggering acute inflammation. Even if your eye looks completely healed from the outside, the deep internal tissues are still undergoing a delicate stabilization process. Please defer all hair treatments for one full month until full tissue recovery is confirmed.
Fitness & Athletics Activity Matrix
"When can I play golf again?" is the single most common question we hear from patients in their 50s following surgery. During the initial recovery phase, avoiding any activity that exerts excessive strain or pressure on the head and eyes is strongly advised. Resuming physical exertion should strictly follow your surgeon's guidance. Holding your breath while lifting heavy dumbbells, for example, sharply spikes intraocular pressure (IOP), which can disrupt the precise positioning of your new multifocal intraocular lens.
Outdoor sports like golf and hiking introduce external hazards such as intense UV rays, wind, and fine dust, all of which heavily irritate recovering eyes. We advise waiting one full month before heading back to the field. When outdoors, wearing polarized sunglasses or protective eyewear is mandatory. Public bathhouses, saunas, and swimming pools must also be avoided for a month due to the high risk of waterborne bacterial infections.
Maintaining crisp, reliable vision over the long term requires incorporating a deliberate, everyday ocular wellness routine.
The temporary dryness experienced after cataract surgery is a normal physiological response as your ocular structure adapts to its new optical environment. Instilling artificial tears consistently prevents micro-abrasions on the corneal surface and minimizes dry-eye discomfort during the healing window.
The antibiotic and anti-inflammatory eye drops prescribed after your procedure are vital to your recovery. Administering them precisely at the instructed frequencies and times plays a definitive role in preventing infection and ensuring optimal visual outcomes.
If you experience any of the following symptoms within days of your cataract surgery, please seek medical attention right away:
Clinical Advisory: If these acute symptoms manifest, avoiding self-diagnosis and immediately scheduling an urgent clinical evaluation with your attending ophthalmologist is critical.