your health
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AGI Yes, I currently wear +0.5 diopters prescribed recently by normal eye doctors. They want to increase it to +2.0 in slow steps every few months. Any other doctor before said I don't need glasses. I admit I see sharp despite the farsight. Last week I was at my local university eye clinic and was diagnosed with a conversion issue. The head of department himself was attending. A week later I visited their orthoptic department and got 4 pdpt (prism diopters) applied later in form of a patch/foil on the right glass. Their head of department talked to me, too. I'm still waiting for the detailed written report.
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AGI Yes, like 2 months ago I once again wanted to know if there's something wrong on the eye level despite previous doctors always saying "you don't need glasses" and after having visited 3 neurologists and an alternative practitioner, all who had no idea either and had never heard of the problem. This time with very strong eye drops the eye doctors measured 2.0 dpt, but some days later with +2.0 test glasses I couldn't see sharp at all at a distance of 2 m and more. So their plan is to slowly let the eyes adapt to increasing diopters.
Until the sight is 100% corrected I can't be sure the cause of the eye strain is not the eyes. Which I always thought up until 2 months ago.
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Since this was the first time I was given vitamin drops for my eyes, I was checking on what they could potentially do. I bumped into this article
From memory the only thing that I was told was eventually off in my blood exams a few times was vitamin D.
Does any of you have the two, low levels of vitamin D and dry eyes?
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The eyedrops I was given pretty immediately soothed the twitching of my eyelids and made looking at the display more comfortable. Happy but surprised/curious, I played around with Google Translate and Google. The product description says "This preparation of vitamin B12 improves muscle function related to eye focusing. It is usually used to treat eyestrain." The active ingredient is cyanocobalamin. I thought it were a drug, but according to WebMed "is a man-made form of vitamin B12 used to prevent and treat low blood levels of this vitamin".
http://clarkeeye.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/Symptoms-of-Vertical-Heterophoria.pdf
Very similar goes for horizontal heterophoria.
degen What is the name of the eyedrop?
https://www.mimaki-family-japan.com/item/detail?item_prefix=TF&item_code=004205&item_branch=001
This is a good article - https://www.aimu.us/2017/12/10/heterophoria-symptoms-causes-diagnosis-and-management/
It also mentions miotic drugs (eye drops) help to some degree, and explains why. I am more and more convinced that all of us here have some far than normal degree of heterophoria.
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@AGI Continuing discussion from the other thread.
The Sancoba eyedrops have regulatory approval in Japan to treat asthenopia. My product (Bausch + Lomb Vitamine B12 Chauvin) has a different indication in France. The only difference between the products as far as I can tell are the inactives. I ordered it online and yes it is a medicine. The Sancoba eyedrops are considered a medicine as well, but at least your doctor has indicated them for you.
Id like to leave this here, good summary with multitude of options: https://green-club.eu/wp-content/uploads/CET-51114-Investigating-and-managing-heterophoria-.pdf
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martin Thanks for the info.
"If decompensation occurs in childhood, the child will develop a manifest strabismus, suppression will occur to overcome diplopia and binocular single vision will be lost." This is me.
I have had these issues all my life due to premature birth, and have alternating esotropia. I have had multiple surgeries to try to correct my squint however even within the last year when speaking to my surgeon, he stated that it could improve my eyes cosmetically, however binocular vision will not be possible, and there is always the risk of over correction, which would look even worse.
On top of this due to my premature birth my eyes are irregularly shaped, which will change how light enters and hits the retina. (Astigmatism?) Also pretty short sighted (approx -8 left eye -12 right eye).
Just saying as somebody who has always had these issues, and used all screens OK until >2012, it's not my eyesight that is causing the problem.
However I agree that everybody on this forum should get a thorough check-up with a specialist.
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diop Well its quite obviously both, otherwise everyone would have an issue when new tech was introduced. When someone figures out a tech solution, Ill be happy to pay them for it. I dont see that happening anytime soon and the eye therapy helps, so Im going that route. I want to get to a point where I dont see a difference in comfort, be it tech solution or health solution.
@KM how is the progress with you farsightness correction?
I have the same "hidden" +2 farsightness diagnosted when my eyes where on special eye drops, and currently starting to correct it with +1 contact lenses. I did feel an instant effect while wearing these and using a "bad" screen - it definately felt differrent, a lot easier to eyes, although my eyes were still getting tired, but without severve eye strain.
I also have similar to @martin's esophoria problem and finished treatment course on synoptophore recently.