• AbstractOther
  • Treatments, desensitization, pills, exercises - solutions

AGI It’s just a precaution on my end. Doctors in the US will hand out anti-depressants like candy, but won’t go anywhere near CBD. Unless you find someone really knowledgeable into homeopathic solutions.

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    vince I lived there and I got a feeling of the differences in the medical system.
    Do you consider CBD a homeopathic solution? How long can you take it for without developing any side effect or addiction? Thanks.

      AGI I don’t think there’s any stopping CBD now. Even Martha Stewart has her own line. I do consider it a better alternative than big pharma drugs. I try not to take everyday as I noticed I will get irritable. I can imagine one can get addicted to it since relaxes the body so much and makes you feel less anxious.

        vince Thanks. I see.
        Are anxiolytics / anti-depressants (I vaguely know they are distinct drugs) known to help with our symptoms?
        I may have missed your initial posts. Have you been diagnosed with heterophoria? Are you doing else like vision therapy?

          AGI I haven't been diagnosed with any eye issues. But my optometrist told me my eye glass prescription is very sensitive and he had to do some top to bottom measurement. Usually that's not necessary and they only measure PD.

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            vince Even Martha Stewart has her own line

            I trust (sensible) doctors over celebrities more đŸ˜›

            vince I can imagine one can get addicted to it since relaxes the body so much and makes you feel less anxious.

            I'm not aware of any addiction concerns with CBD in the medical literature. I'd be more concerned about building a tolerance and having a reduction of positive effects.

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            vince New adjusted glasses do not provide any relief, do they?
            I too have not been diagnosed with any eye issue and I do not wear glasses. Yet, as of Tuesday I have not recovered from 20 min looking at a couple of laptops in an electronic store on last Friday.

              JTL Furthermore the marketing of Neurolens kind of rubs me the wrong way. Some of the science is somewhat sound (that strain of eyes can cause optic nerve issues that cause other problems), but I'm not fully convinced it's the solution.

              AGI I don't have any special adjustments in my glasses, other than the top to bottom measurement. My eyes are really sensitive so I'm not surprised I can't tolerate LED backlighting in laptops. I would like to try the neurolens.

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              This is a personal question. I do not know if anyone feels like answering.
              Has anyone experienced that anti-depressants / anxiolytics improve tolerance to offensive electronics?

              About 10-15 years ago I took Zoloft 25 to 50 mg per day, which was the smallest dose. I was prescribed the drug because I was under immense stress and I made the wrong use of it, in the sense that I ended up pushing myself even further. I was able to sleep really little and be very performant, work like a dog, do sport. I was tireless. After a year I decided to go back walk on my legs.

              I remember that those days I had to buy a laptop to use up the long commuting time constructively and I spent 6-9 months looking around for a "good" device. I could not find anything easy on my eyes. I returned a few DELL laptops ordered online, because there was the option of returning within 15 days. Finally, I had to buy something at all costs and I opted for a LENOVO ThinkPad T60. I kept it in my drawer for 6 months because it would fry my eyes and provoke the characteristic neck pain within minutes. At a certain point, I had no chance but to use it. First, I found out that I could handle it connected to an external LCD monitor. Yet, the sole peripheral sight of the laptop display would bother me. Ultimately, I figured out that the laptop would pass from unusable to usable 15 hours in a row without the slightest issue by reducing the resolution from native to 1024 x 768. I already brought this up multiple times and I am kind of drifting from the point I intended to make.
              All this to say that Zoloft did not help reduce my eyestrain in any way. Hadn't it been for the trick of reducing the resolution, I would have wasted EUR 1,800 in 2007.
              I am not an expert of those types of medicines, but I believe Zoloft is catalogued as anti-depressant. I guess an anxiolytic may have a different effect on eyestrain. Has anyone tried out?
              I also wonder what the principle behind the effectiveness of CBD oil in treating eyestrain is compared to anti-depressants / anxiolytics.

                AGI Hadn't it been for the trick of reducing the resolution, I would have wasted EUR 1,800 in 2007.

                Back then I was never using bleeding-edge hardware (typically used Intel HD Graphics) but I was running the latest XP/7 and latest Intel drivers without issues.

                Did outputting VGA make a difference? Or to a CRT?

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                  diop Did outputting VGA make a difference? Or to a CRT?

                  Outputting VGA alone did not make a difference, I had to reduce the resolution. That was at home.
                  In the office I had a tiny CRT monitor, which I used at 1024 x 768 resolution too and I kept until my last day in late 2010. I was the last one using CRT in the whole institute. Colleagues were laughing at me, but I always refused to upgrade to LCD monitors according to the philosophy "don't touch what works fine".

                  8 months later

                  AGI

                  Regarding antidepressants, I recently seem to have been cured of my pwm problems. For instance riding in a new car (especially at night) would give me terrible headaches from all the interior lights. The only thing I can think of is that I started antidepressants about 5 months ago. I started with trazodone and switched to paxil (for reasons unrelated to my headaches).

                  Anybody else have a similar experience?

                    GregAtkinson

                    When I am less anxious and less stressed… flicker bothers me less. So if the problem with the car displays is flicker as opposed to any other issue (usually it is, they use shitty LED's with PWM) then I find that during high stress periods my car can become undriveable.

                    So while the SSRI's might not actually help the problem, they likely decrease your stress/anxiety drastically, which in turn makes you stronger against these sorts of things.

                      GregAtkinson

                      Gurm

                      Don't you have issue with dryness when taking antidepressants? I have tried them several times and each time they make my dry eyes even drier.

                        Dominic

                        So I'm not currently taking them, but never noticed this to be a problem when I was. Then again, my doses were exceptionally low.

                        Antidepressants have a strong link to helping migraines. It was an ancillary side effect that helped move migraine researchers into different areas of the brain and different neurotransmitters. The big down side being antidepressants usually have some pretty awful side effects for a lot of people.

                        GregAtkinson

                        Wow, congrats on finding a solution! I'm currently on Zoloft & haven't noticed any improvement with flicker, but maybe I'll have a similar experience to yours if I tried Paxil. It seems like they're relatively similar, so I'm going to ask my Doctor about that.

                        Would you mind elaborating on your success with Paxil? For example, are you able to use all problematic screens now with no symptoms?

                          5 days later
                          dev