No-Touch LASIK, also known as TransPRK, is a laser vision correction procedure that reshapes the cornea without creating a flap or using surgical instruments. It offers a completely contact-free treatment, making it a safer option for certain patients while improving vision effectively.

Most laser vision correction involves something touching the eye before the laser fires. A blade for the flap in conventional LASIK. A suction ring for femto LASIK and SMILE. An alcohol solution for LASEK. In No-Touch LASIK, none of that happens. The excimer laser does everything itself, from the moment the treatment starts to the moment it finishes.
No-Touch LASIK, also known as Streamlight LASIK or trans-epithelial PRK with streamlined workflow, is a surface-based laser vision correction technique. The excimer laser removes the corneal epithelium and reshapes the underlying stroma in a single uninterrupted step, without creating a corneal flap and without any instrument or suction ring making direct contact with the corneal surface before treatment. Hence the name “no-touch” or “touchless.”
At Vasan Eye Care, Streamlight LASIK is offered for patients better suited to surface ablation than to flap-based LASIK. That includes patients with thinner corneas, those in occupations with a high risk of eye trauma, and those whose lifestyles involve contact sports. The technique is performed using the Schwind Amaris or similar high-repetition-rate excimer laser platforms.
No-Touch LASIK is gaining recognition in India as a flapless alternative for patients who prefer to avoid mechanical or femtosecond flap creation. The procedure is particularly well suited to Indian patients involved in defence services, martial arts, contact sports, or dusty industrial environments, where a corneal flap could pose a long-term risk of dislocation decades after the surgery.
Indian regulatory authorities have approved trans-epithelial PRK platforms, and centres following evidence-based protocols deliver consistent outcomes in properly selected patients. The procedure requires a healthy cornea of adequate thickness, stable refraction, absence of ectatic disease, and a good ocular surface. A full pre-operative evaluation decides whether Streamlight LASIK is the right technique for the individual, or whether LASIK or SMILE would work better.
Several flapless, surface-based techniques are offered in India under similar umbrella terms. Each has a slightly different mechanism of epithelial removal:
| Technique | Flap Creation | Epithelial Removal | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Streamlight LASIK (Trans-PRK) | None | Laser-only, single step | Fastest trans-epithelial technique; minimal contact |
| Conventional Trans-PRK | None | Laser removal of epithelium in one or two steps | Established flapless approach |
| PRK (Photorefractive Keratectomy) | None | Mechanical or alcohol-assisted | Older surface technique; longer recovery |
| LASEK | None | Alcohol loosens epithelium, which is lifted | Epithelial flap preserved |
| Epi-LASIK | None | Epikeratome separates epithelium | Mechanical epithelial separation |
In Streamlight or no-touch LASIK, the excimer laser first ablates the corneal epithelium based on the patient’s measured epithelial thickness. Immediately after that, in a continuous treatment sequence, the same laser reshapes the underlying stroma to correct the refractive error. The transition between epithelial removal and stromal ablation is seamless, which reduces total exposure time and limits dehydration of the corneal surface.
After ablation, a bandage contact lens is placed on the cornea to support epithelial healing over the next three to five days. This lens is a soft, therapeutic contact lens that protects the raw corneal surface while the epithelium regenerates underneath it. Once the lens comes off, the bulk of the early healing is done, though visual stabilisation takes longer.
Streamlight LASIK may be considered for patients who depend on glasses or contact lenses and who are not ideal candidates for flap-based LASIK. Specific situations where it is often recommended:
A complete evaluation confirms whether the patient’s eye is suitable. The trade-off for choosing surface ablation is a slower, more uncomfortable early recovery compared with LASIK. That trade-off is worth it for some patients and not for others.
Pricing for Streamlight LASIK is broadly similar to standard LASIK and varies with the laser platform and hospital category.
| Procedure | Indicative Cost Both Eyes (INR) | Typical Inclusions |
|---|---|---|
| Streamlight LASIK / Trans-PRK | 75,000 to 1,20,000 | Pre-operative workup, laser treatment, bandage contact lens, post-op drops, follow-ups |
| PRK (standard) | 55,000 to 90,000 | Standard surface ablation package |
| LASEK / Epi-LASIK | 60,000 to 1,00,000 | Flapless epithelial technique |
Costs vary by platform, city, and individual case complexity. Confirm inclusions during consultation.
Here is where expectations need to be set honestly. Compared with flap-based LASIK, surface ablation involves a longer, more uncomfortable early recovery. Patients typically experience moderate discomfort, watering, and light sensitivity during the first three to five days while the epithelium heals. Vision is blurred initially and gradually clears over one to two weeks, with continued refinement over one to three months. The final visual result is comparable to LASIK in suitable candidates, but the path there is slower. Knowing this up front makes the recovery far less alarming when you are living through it.
Standard LASIK involves creating a corneal flap. No-Touch LASIK uses the excimer laser alone to remove the epithelium and reshape the cornea without any flap or mechanical instrument touching the cornea. The trade-off is a longer, more uncomfortable early recovery in exchange for no flap-related long-term risks.
Yes, and this is one of its most valuable indications. Surface ablation is often preferred for thinner corneas, because it preserves more stromal tissue by avoiding the flap. Patients who would be borderline or unsuitable for LASIK often do well with Streamlight.
Functional vision usually returns within seven to ten days, with gradual refinement over one to three months. Initial discomfort is noticeably higher than with flap-based LASIK. This is not a procedure where you wake up the next morning seeing perfectly; give it the time it needs.
The procedure itself is performed under topical anaesthesia and is not painful. Moderate discomfort is common for the first few days while the epithelium heals, typically the first three to five days. Pain relief helps.
No. Vision is usually blurred for several days. Driving should be resumed only after the surgeon confirms adequate visual recovery, typically around a week to ten days after surgery.
Because no blade, microkeratome, or suction ring contacts the cornea before treatment. Only the laser beam interacts with the corneal surface. The name describes a genuinely minimal-contact procedure, not just a marketing label.
For people involved in contact sports, martial arts, or defence duties, the absence of a corneal flap removes the long-term risk of flap dislocation from a future blow to the eye. A flap is never the same as intact cornea. If your sport involves taking hits, a flapless procedure is a reasonable preference.
The refractive correction is permanent. Age-related changes such as presbyopia or cataract can still develop later in life, but these are unrelated to the Streamlight surgery itself.
Some patients experience dry eye symptoms in the first few weeks, which usually improve with lubricating drops. The incidence of persistent dry eye is generally lower than with flap-based procedures, because the corneal nerves are less disturbed overall.
No water in the eyes for two weeks. No swimming for four weeks. No eye make-up for two weeks. No contact sports for at least a month. Follow the surgeon’s specific instructions, which may be stricter or slightly more relaxed depending on how your eye is healing.
References
* American Academy of Ophthalmology. Surface Ablation Techniques Overview.
* Aslanides IM et al. Single-Step Trans-Epithelial PRK. Journal of Refractive Surgery.
* All India Ophthalmological Society. Refractive Surgery Guidelines.
* Schwind eye-tech-solutions. Streamlight Trans-PRK Technical Documentation.
* Indian Journal of Ophthalmology. Outcomes of Trans-Epithelial PRK in Indian Patients.