FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) -- Some people call them floaters. Eye doctors call them “vitreous opacities.” Emily Flynn called hers “a little fuzzball,” and she flew halfway around the world to have it removed. After more than 100 pinpoint zaps from a laser beam during a half-hour visit to a northern Virginia office park, the fuzzball was gone, obliterated within the clear, gelatinous goo that fills the eyeball>>> Discuss This Story