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Nearsightedness
(Myopia)
Myopia
is the medical term for nearsightedness. Myopia occurs when
an eye is too long or the cornea's curvature is too steep.
Light rays entering the eye do not come to a sharp focus on
the retina. Instead, they focus farther forward, producing
a blurred image. The term nearsighted means that myopic individuals
can see "near" objects clearly without glasses, but objects
further in the distance are blurred. The more myopic, the
more blurred distant objects appear, the higher your eyeglass
prescription and the thicker your glasses needed for correction.
Myopia can be corrected by any method that reduces the
total refractive power of the eye. Eyeglasses and contact
lenses do this by putting in front of the eye "negative" lenses
that are thicker at the edge than in the center. LASIK procedure
by flattening the central part of the cornea, decreases the
refractive power of the eye.
Farsightedness
(Hyperopia)
Hyperopia is the medical term for farsightedness. This
occurs when an eye is too short or the corneal curvature is
flat . Light rays entering the eye do not come to a sharp
focus on the retina. Instead, they focus farther backward,
producing a blurred image. Farsighted eyes are too short and
need a "plus" power to help them focus.
Astigmatism
Astigmatism
is the most common refractive (focusing) error. Astigmatism
creates distorted and ghosting vision. It occurs when the
front of the cornea is somewhat oval-shaped rather than round
.The two different curves in such a corneal surface each bend
light rays to a separate focus point.
Astigmatism correction makes all the rays of light focus at
the same distance so that they all fall correctly on the retina.
Small degrees of astigmatism do not impact vision significantly,
but with larger amounts, distortion and blur occur. Astigmatism
can occur alone as the sole optical error, or may occur together
with either myopia or hyperopia.
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