I had Lasik 9 years ago... and then had it redone with "custom" Lasik as an MS4. Both times I had "complications" and a "difficult course." During the redo as an MS4, my right eye went perfectly, but in my left eye, they had a hard time trying to raise the flap causing me one week of pure hell (essentially no vision for a week in my left eye).
So... that being said, I would do everything all over again. I was essentially blind without my glasses in the beginning (-12.5 for those who care). My current vision is 20/15 in my right eye and 20/40 in my left eye. Because of the discrepency, I wear glasses when I read or work on the computer for extended periods of time... and while driving at night.
So, for a surgeon, do the risks outweigh the benifits? You have to make that judgment on your own. I do plenty of things in life that are more risky to my career as a surgeon than Lasik -- using saws is just one (we just had a vascular surgeon at our institution saw his fingers off with a table saw)
I am overall very happy with my decision... even with a complicated course. Not having to wear contacts during those long call nights is a huge advantage. On the other hand, I don't mind wearing glasses when doing procedures in the OR or ED... I've saved myself a few exposures just because I had my glasses on. But, there is a huge difference betweeen using glasess when you want to and being utterly dependent on them.
Like with any surgery it's a tough decision and every individual needs to weigh the risks and benefits. The one recommendation... if you proceed, find somebody who is doing custom (like Wavefront) Lasik... it's a little more expensive, but you get much better vision and it seems to not degrade as quickly.