Presbyopia

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What is Presbyopia?

The need for a vision correction for near vision tasks occurs for most people around age forty. Often it is referred to as one of the inevitable aspects of the aging process. It doesn't matter if you require a correction for distance, if you are nearsighted or farsighted. Considered a normal part of the aging process, the crystalline lens, located inside your eye and just behind the pupil, is responsible for adjusting the focus from a distance point to a near point. Tiny cilliary muscles pull and push on the lens altering it's curvature, thereby changing it's focal power. As we age, the lens becomes less flexible and the cilliary muscle becomes less powerful. This is a slow process, starting during the third decade of life and becoming symptomatic for most people by age 45. The most commonly reported symptoms are "my arms aren't long enough anymore" or "I can see fine far away but it takes a lot of effort to see small print these days, and I need more light"

What causes Presbyopia?

Located a few millimeters inside your eye, just behind the iris (the colored part) and the pupil (the opening in the center of the iris) is the crystalline lens. The lens is designed to constantly adjust it's focal power in order to bring near objects into view. As we age, our crystalline lens become less flexible and more rigid. The muscles that pull and push the lens into the appropriate shape to yield a proper focus fatigue. The focusing system then fails to perform it's role in the vision system. This is the commonly accepted notion of the causative role resulting in the condition called presbyopia. Some researchers feel that there may be other related causes, including cilliary muscle spasm or age-related muscle weakness.

A closely related aging event is the clouding of the crystalline lens, called cataracts. Please see the Abstracts: Cataracts or EyeCare Report: The Aging Eye, for more info.

Treatment of Presbyopia

The traditional approach is simply to use near or reading glasses. If you need prescription lenses for distance as well, bifocal lenses may be in order. Near eyeglasses provide the degree of focusing no longer provided by your crystalline lens. There are also multifocal contact lenses and monovision contact lenses. Exercising the cilliary muscle is sometimes helpful and nutrition plays a role, too. A guide the exercises are included in the EyeCare Report: The Aging Eye,

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Harry A. Bernstein, M.D.

 Board Certifed:A.B.O.

Member: A.A.O., A.D.A., J.D.A., I.S.M.S., I.S.P.B., C.M.S.

Clinical Instructor: Our Lady of the Resurrection Hospital

On Staff: Sherman Hospital & Valley Ambulatory Surgery Center

Former Chief Resident: Ophthalmology, Cook County Hospital

Fellowship:Medical Diseases of the Retina, Lutheran General Hospital

Former Radio Show Host: "Ask the Eye Doctor", WRMN

Please feel free to E-Mail our office with your questions

 

The Elgin Eye Clinic

472 North McLean Blvd.
Elgin, Illinios
60123

847.741.5730