Why We Need Reading
Glasses – “Presbyopia”
Presbyopia is a condition in which your eyes gradually lose
the ability to see things up close.
With presbyopia, reading glasses
can help refract (bend) light rays before they enter the eye to compensate for loss
of near vision.It is not a disorder or disease but rather a natural aging
process of the eye. Presbyopia literally means “old eye” in Greek.
You may start to notice presbyopia around the age of 40,
when you begin to hold reading materials farther away from your face in order
to see them more clearly. This familiar event is often the first sign of
presbyopia, which, if left uncorrected, can cause eye fatigue and headaches.
What causes
presbyopia?
When you are young, the lens in your eye is soft and
flexible. The lens can change its shape easily, allowing you to focus on
objects both close and far away.
After age 40, the lens becomes more rigid and cannot change
shape as easily as it once did. As a result, it is more difficult for the eye
to focus clearly on close objects. Reading and performing other close-up tasks
such as threading a needle become very difficult.
No medications, supplemental vitamins or exercises can stop
or reverse the normal aging process that causes presbyopia.
What can be done to
correct vision for presbyopia?
Reading glasses. Prescription eyeglasses help refract, or
bend, light rays before they enter the eye to compensate for the loss of near
vision. If you have no other refractive errors (such as nearsightedness, farsightedness
or astigmatism), you may only have to wear eyeglasses when reading or
performing close tasks.
Bifocals, trifocals or progressive eyeglasses.
If you already wear eyeglasses to correct other refractive
errors, you may need bifocals or trifocals to correct for presbyopia. Bifocals
provide correction for both near and far vision. Trifocals provide correction
for near, intermediate and far vision.
Progressive lenses offer the same corrections as bifocals or
trifocals. But unlike bifocals or trifocals, which have a distinct line between
levels of correction, progressive lenses are made with a gradual change in
correction levels from the top of the lenses to the bottom.
Contact lenses. If you prefer to wear contacts rather than
eyeglasses, there are two types of contact lenses available: mono vision and multifocal lenses.
Mono vision contacts correct one eye for distance vision and
the other eye for close-up vision. Because you need to train your brain to use
one eye for distance and the other eye for near vision, it usually takes some
time to adjust to mono vision. Some depth perception may also be lost with mono
vision.
There are many different types of multifocal contacts
available. Multifocal contacts have different focus zones within each lens,
allowing for both near and distance vision. These different focus zones may
cause the vision to be less sharp when compared to a mono focal lens.
However, with this loss in sharpness comes the ability to be
able to see at both near and distance. Most people can adjust to multifocal
lenses, but they do not work for everyone.
Can refractive surgery
correct presbyopia?
Some people choose refractive surgery to achieve mono vision,
where laser surgery corrects one eye for distance and the other for near
vision, just as with contact lenses. You may wish to consider trying mono vision
with contact lenses before surgery to determine your ability to adapt to this
correction.
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