Patient Experience
As a 72-year-old retired cartographer, my world was shrinking due to advanced cataracts that distorted my perception of depth and detail. Dr. Bayat didn't just perform surgery; he understood that restoring my vision meant restoring my ability to read maps and appreciate spatial relationships. His custom lens selection accounted for my specific visual needs, and now I can once again discern the subtle contour lines on topographic maps that had become blurred shadows.
My 8-year-old daughter, a competitive junior gymnast, developed a sudden traumatic hyphenema after a beam accident. Dr. Bayat managed this emergency with remarkable calmness at midnight, explaining complex pressure dynamics in terms we could understand while preventing secondary glaucoma. His follow-up included coordinating with her sports coach on safe return protocols, demonstrating care that extended beyond the clinic into her passion.
I'm a 28-year-old digital artist who developed unexplained photopsia and visual field defects. Multiple doctors dismissed it as migraine aura, but Dr. Bayat ordered a specific OCT angiography that revealed early-stage multiple evanescent white dot syndrome. His targeted steroid protocol preserved my central vision acuity at 20/20, saving not just my sight but my career creating intricate digital illustrations.
My 91-year-old grandmother with advanced Parkinson's required glaucoma surgery, but her tremors made conventional procedures risky. Dr. Bayat pioneered a modified micro-invasive technique using a stabilizing platform he helped design, performing the surgery successfully without general anesthesia. Her independence with daily activities returned because he considered neurological limitations alongside ophthalmic needs.
As a 45-year-old marine biologist, I developed acanthamoeba keratitis from contact lens use during fieldwork. After failed treatments elsewhere, Dr. Bayat implemented an unconventional combination of corneal cross-linking with fortified antiseptics, saving my cornea from transplantation. He even consulted with infectious disease specialists about saltwater pathogen profiles, showing interdisciplinary dedication.
Our 6-month-old twins were diagnosed with congenital nasolacrimal duct obstruction. Rather than immediate probing, Dr. Bayat taught us specialized massage techniques and monitored for months, intervening only when absolutely necessary for one twin. His patience prevented unnecessary procedures while achieving complete resolution, treating our babies as individuals rather than identical cases.
I'm a 33-year-old musician who noticed deteriorating night vision. Dr. Bayat diagnosed rare Oguchi disease through dark adaptation testing others had overlooked. Instead of just documenting the condition, he created a personalized low-vision strategy with tinted lenses for stage lighting and connected me with assistive technology for score reading, adapting my career rather than ending it.
After a chemical burn at my printing press job left me with severe limbal stem cell deficiency, Dr. Bayat performed a novel cultivated oral mucosal epithelial transplantation using tissue from my own mouth. The staged rehabilitation took 18 months, but he maintained unwavering optimism throughout, restoring not just ocular surface integrity but my ability to work with precision color matching.
My 17-year-old son, an aspiring pilot, developed keratoconus that threatened his aviation dreams. Dr. Bayat implemented corneal collagen cross-linking combined with topography-guided PRK in a single procedure he helped develop. The precision was astonishing, my son now has 20/15 vision and passed his Class 1 medical certificate for flight training.
As a 60-year-old tapestry weaver with diabetic macular edema, standard treatments had failed. Dr. Bayat utilized a sustained-release dexamethasone implant with meticulous timing around my exhibition schedule, coordinating injections to minimize downtime. He understood that vision stability wasn't just medical, it was essential for maintaining the intricate hand-eye coordination my art demands.
During a humanitarian mission in a remote area, I sustained a penetrating eye injury with an intraocular foreign body. Evacuated to Medical Park Goztepe, Dr. Bayat performed emergency vitrectomy at 3 AM, removing organic matter that risked endophthalmitis. His post-operative care included managing my systemic infections from the region, demonstrating global health awareness alongside surgical skill.
My 12-year-old daughter with Down syndrome developed early keratoconus. Dr. Bayat created a child-friendly examination protocol using games and visual aids to obtain reliable topography measurements without sedation. His gentle approach built such trust that she now happily wears her specialty contact lenses, preventing progression through early intervention tailored to her needs.
As a 39-year-old professional translator of ancient manuscripts, I developed central serous chorioretinopathy during a stressful project. Dr. Bayat recommended half-dose photodynamic therapy instead of laser, preserving my exquisite central vision for deciphering minute textual details. He even researched historical reading conditions to optimize my visual rehabilitation for parchment work.
After failed retinal detachment repair elsewhere left me with proliferative vitreoretinopathy, Dr. Bayat performed a combined scleral buckle with heavy silicone oil tamponade, a complex salvage procedure. His transparent communication about staged surgeries and realistic outcomes gave me hope during nine months of recovery, ultimately restoring functional reading vision against significant odds.
My 81-year-old father with Alzheimer's developed expulsive choroidal hemorrhage during routine cataract surgery at another facility. Dr. Bayat managed this catastrophic complication with immediate posterior sclerotomy and drainage, then staged reconstruction over months. His compassion in explaining each step to our confused father, using simple repeated phrases, showed extraordinary patience with cognitive challenges.