amblyopia
| What is amblyopia? |
| What causes lazy eye? |
| How do these factors lead to amblyopia? |
| How common is amblyopia? |
| How can I tell if my child has amblyopia? |
| How is amblyopia treated? |
| Related inks |
A person with amblyopia, or ‘lazy eye’, has a condition in which the message sent from the affected eye or eues to the brain is of low quality, making the sight of that eye poor. Sometimes the phrase ‘dimness of vision’ is used to describe amblyopia. A person with amblyopia will have poor vision which cannot be simply corrected with spectacles.
Amblyopia has many different causes. Generally, if a person cannot use both eyes together when they are young, one eye will become amblyopic. Common causes of this are a turned eye or a large difference in the extent of shortsightedness, longsightedness or astigmatism (refractive error) between the person’s eyes. Rare causes of amblyopia can include disease or injury to the nerve connecting the eye to the brain, some psychiatric conditions and excessive use of tobacco, alcohol or other drugs.
Q How do these factors lead to amblyopia?
Normally the message sent to the brain from both eyes is the same. In a person with amblyopia, the message received by the brain from one eye is different from the message from the other eye, either because it is out of focus or because the eyes are pointing in different directions. The brain compensates for this difference by ignoring the message from the lazy eye. The affected eye tends to be used less and further weakening of the eye results. Although the basic components of the visual system are present at birth, a child’s visual system continues to develop after birth in response to his or her visual environment. This development progresses rapidly in the first few years of life and continues until at least the age of seven years. If a child’s visual system is not properly stimulated during these early years, lack of development may result in a permanent or long-term problem.
Up to four per cent of the population have amblyopia.
Q How can I tell if my child has amblyopia?
The most important sign is poor vision but because only one eye is affected and the other eye usually does the work of both, parents often are unaware of the problem. Other clues are a noticeable favouring of one eye, a ‘turned’ eye and bumping into objects on one side of the body. A thorough eye examination is the only sure way of finding out if your child has amblyopia. If you think that there may be something wrong with your child’s vision, discuss it with your optometrist.
The treatment depends on the particular cause of the amblyopia.
Most commonly glasses, prisms, contact lenses and vision therapy programs are used to train the poor eye to function normally. Sometimes the better eye is covered with a patch to force the person to use and strengthen the lazy eye. Some special or rare types of amblyopia are treated simply by improving the person’s general health. The earlier amblyopia is detected, the easier it is to treat.
Hyperopia (longsightedness)
Myopia (shortsightedness)
Astigmatism
Vision and school achievement
Parents’ guide to children’s vision
