Eye Conditions & Treatment
Children's Disorders
As one of the leading eye-care centers in Louisiana, we’ve been providing successful treatments for the entire family, including children. We offer the most advanced treatments for pink eye, lazy eye, crossed eyes, and other common disorders.
How
does a child's eyesight develop under normal conditions?
Infants
are able to see when first born, but eyesight improves with use during
the first months and into the early childhood years. By the time a child
is 9 years old, eyesight is usually fully developed and cannot be changed.
This is why it's very important to have eyesight checked at an early age.
What
is Amblyopia?
Sometimes
called "lazy eye," Amblyopia is poor vision or reduced vision
in an eye that didn't develop normally in childhood. The condition is
common, affecting nearly 3 out of 100 people. It is easy to correct when
found in infants or early in childhood.
What
Causes Amblyopia?
There
are 3 major causes:
- Strabismus (misaligned eyes): This is the most common cause. The crossed eye "turns
off" to avoid double vision and the child uses only the better
eye.
- Unequal
Focus (Refractive Error): Refractive errors are simply eye conditions
which are corrected by wearing glasses. Amblyopia occurs when one eye
is out of focus because it is more near- or far-sighted or astigmatic
than the other. The result of this unequal vision is that the weak eye
"turns off." Again, only the better eye is used.
- Cloudiness
in eye tissues (which are normally clear) : This is often the most
severe form and is caused by anything which prevents a clear image from
being focused inside the eye. Childhood cataracts (cloudiness of the
eye's lens) can be one cause.
How
is Amblyopia diagnosed and treated?
Unless
there is a misaligned eye or other obvious abnormality, there is often
no way to tell that something is wrong. Amblyopia is detected by measuring
the difference in vision between the two eyes. There are a variety of
tests which are performed observing the reactions of each eye as one is
covered at a time.
This
condition is often treated by wearing a patch on the strong eye to force
the weak eye to work. In some cases glasses may be prescribed or surgery
is needed to correct the cause of Amblyopia.
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