
Vision
Conditions
The miracle of sight is one we hold
dear. Maintaining healthy eyes is in everyone’s best interest. If our vision
begins to fail, science and medicine play a large role in recreating vision
through various optical technologies.
Common Refractive
Errors
If you have 20/20 vision at both
distance and near, you have Emmetropia. An Emmetropic Eye has the ability to
focus distant light rays to a point focus on the retina. In addition to this,
the Emmetropic eye can accommodate and focus near point objects for reading
without the aid of ophthalmic lenses.
Refractive errors, simply put, are errors in the refraction of light through
the eye. That is, the eye’s inability to properly transmit and refract light to
focus on the retina, in the back of the eye. There are three types of
Refractive Errors: Myopia, Hyperopia and Astigmia.
Myopia
Myopia, sometimes referred to as
“nearsightedness”, is a refractive error where light does not reach the retina.
Light comes to a focus before the retina, in the vitreous humor, the gel-like
substance inside the globe of the eye. Because the light rays do not focus on
the retina, the image formed in the brain is blurred. There are three types of
Myopia which include Corneal Myopia (cornea is too steep), Axial Myopia (length
of the eye is too long), or Lenticular Myopia (the lens system inside the eye
is too strong). The myopic eye refracts light too much…it needs minus (concave)
lenses for correction. The far point of the myopic eye, its own unique focal
length, is inside optical infinity (inside twenty feet). If an eye has a low
amount of myopia, its far point could be out to 10, even 15 feet. If an eye has
a large amount of myopia, its far point could be as little as 10 centimeters.
In either case, ophthalmic lenses are used for its correction. Myopic eyes have
a tendency to increase slightly over the years, and rarely remain stable over
one’s lifetime. It is important to visit your eye doctor on a regular basis to
be sure that you manage your myopia and eliminate eyestrain with current
lenses.
Hyperopia
Hyperopia, sometimes referred to as
“farsightedness”, is also a refractive error of the eye. In this case, light
rays come to a focus behind the retina. The cause of Hyperopia could be that
the cornea is too flat (Corneal Hyperopia), or the globe of the eye is too
short (Axial Hyperopia). The far point of the hyperopic eye can vary too. In
theory, it is beyond optical infinity/20 feet. Some Hyperopes can see fine in
the distance, but cannot see close up. Others need corrective lenses all of the
time. Plus (convex) lenses are used for the correction of Hyperopia, to
redirect the focus of light so that it reaches the retina. One particular type
of Hyperopia, Latent Hyperopia, is difficult to detect without the use of
cycloplegics, eye drops to relax the muscle inside of the eye to stop
accommodation. Children with Latent Hyperopia over-use their accommodative
system, which masks their refractive error. It is crucial that children see the
eye doctor prior to entering kindergarten and then annually until they are finished growing. Consult your local eye care experts at Prairie EyeCare Center for more information.
Astigmia
Astigmia is the plural for
Astigmatism, of which there are five types:
1. Simple Myopic Astigmatism
2. Simple Hyperopic Astigmatism
3. Compound Myopic Astigmatism
4. Compound Hyperopic Astigmatism
5. Mixed Astigmatism
In each type, light rays do not make a
point focus before or beyond the retina, but have two major meridians of focus,
usually 90 degrees apart. If you do not have Astigmatism, your eyes are
spherical. If you have Astigmatism, your eyes are aspherical. A spherical eye
(myopic or hyperopic) requires a spherical lens (concave or convex) to correct
its refractive error. An aspherical eye needs a lens that corrects for the
error in refraction differently in the major meridians. A way to imagine this
is to compare the shapes with a basketball and a football. If you could measure
the curvature in a basketball, it would be the same all the way around, in all
meridians. If you could measure curvatures in a football, they would vary…a
flatter side and a steeper side. Similarly, the astigmatic eye has some areas
with flatter curvature, and some with steeper curves. A simple convex or
concave lens will not correct this refractive error…it requires an ophthalmic
lens that has two major meridians of curvature, each to offset that of the eye.
These lenses are toroidal in nature, and called “cylinder lenses”. The five
types of astigmatism are classifications of where the major meridian light rays
focus: on/in front of the retina, on/beyond the retina, both in front of the
retina, at separate points, both beyond the retina, at separate points, or one
in front of the retina, and one behind.
Myopia or Hyperopia can be combined with Astigmatism,
in which case a spherocylinder lens is used for its correction. This lens
design, known as “cylinder lenses” is commonly used for the correction of
Astigmatism.
Posted on
Wed, February 17, 2010
by Melinda Kennel