Hyperopia
Hyperopia
Hyperopia
Hyperopia
hyperopia
Farsightedness, or hyperopia, as it is medically termed, is a vision condition in which distant objects are usually seen clearly, but close ones do not come into proper focus. Approximately 25% of the general population is hyperopic (a person having hyperopia).
hyperopia
Farsightedness occurs if your eyeball is too short or the cornea has too little curvature, so light entering your eye is not focused correctly. Its effect varies greatly, depending on the magnitude of hyperopia, the age of the individual, the status of the accommodative and convergence system, and the demands placed on the visual system.
By Judith Lee and Gretchyn Bailey; reviewed by Dr. Vance Thompson; Flash illustration by Stephen Bagi
hyperopia
In theory, hyperopia is the inability to focus and see the close objects clearly, but in practice many young hyperopics can compensate the weakness of their focusing ability by excessive use of the accommodation functions of their eyes. But older hyperopics are not as lucky as them. By aging, accommodation range diminishes and for older hyperopics seeing close objects becomes an impossible mission.
Hyperopia is a refractive error in which parallel rays of light entering the eye reach a focal point behind the plane of the retina, while accommodation is maintained in a state of relaxation.
Amplitude of Accommodation
hyperopia
An emmetropic eye for reading and other near work, at distance of 16 in (40cm), the required amount of acc. Is 2.50D. If an eye that has 1.00D of acc for distance vision and 3.50D of acc. For 40cm. The additional acc. is automatically accompanied by a large amount of acc convergence, which can cause severe headaches and other symptoms of eyestrain.
Age 10 15 20 25 30
hyperopia
Also for people with advanced hyperopia, including young people, the accommodation mechanism is not sufficient and they need spectacles, or a laser vision correction procedure. Unfortunately, people with advanced hyperopia may even suffer from both close and distant vision problems.
When an excessive amount of acc. Is required in uncorrected hyperopia, the visual system has three choices:
The visual system can let the letters go out of focus, making reading impossible. One eye may turn inward, toward the nose, relieving the eyestrain but causing double vision. Single vision may be maintained, but at the cost of large amount of stress due to the continual unconscious effort to keep the eye from overconverging, and thus avoid duble vision.
1. 2. 3.
Early detection of hyperopia may help to prevent the complications of strabismus and amblyopia in young children. In older children, uncorrected hyperopia may affect learning ability. The precise mechanism of this relationship is unclear, but optical blur, accommodative and binocular dysfunction, and fatigue all appear to play roles. In individuals of any age, it can contribute to ocular discomfort and visual inefficiency.
accommodation
+9
+8
+5
+3
Manifest hyperopia
three categories:
Simple hyperopia -normal biological variation, can be of axial or refractive etiology. Pathological hyperopia caused by abnormal ocular anatomy due to maldevelopment, ocular disease, or trauma. Functional hyperopia results from paralysis of accommodation.
Physiologic Hyperopia
From the perspective of physiologic optics, hyperopia occurs when the axial length of the eye is shorter than the refracting components the eye requires for light to focus precisely on the photoreceptor layer of the retina. Hyperopia may result in combination with or isolation from a relatively flat corneal curvature, insufficient crystalline lens power, increased lens thickness, short axial length, or variance of the normal separation of the optical components of the eye relative to each other.
Physiologic Hyperopia
Facultative and latent hyperopia are typically overcome in the young patient by the action of accommodation, which may not be sustainable for long periods of time under conditions of visual stress. In general, younger individuals with lower degrees of hyperopia and moderate visual demands are less adversely affected than older individuals, who have higher degrees of hyperopia and more demanding visual needs.
Pathologic Hyperopia
Pathologic hyperopia may be due to maldevelopment of the eye during the prenatal or early postnatal period, a variety of corneal or lenticular changes, chorioretinal or orbital inflammation or neoplasms, or to neurologic- or pharmacologic-based etiologies. It is rare in comparison with physiologic hyperopia. Because of the relationship of pathologic hyperopia to potentially serious ocular and systemic disorders, proper diagnosis and treatment of the underlying cause may prove critical to the patient's overall health.
Pathologic Hyperopia
Microphthalmia (with or without congenital or early acquired cataracts and persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous) and this condition's often hereditary form, nanophthalmia, may produce hyperopia in excess of +20D. Anterior segment malformations such as corneal plana, sclerocornea, anterior chamber cleavage syndrome, and limbal dermoids are associated with high hyperopia. Acquired disorders that can cause a hyperopic shift result from corneal distortion or trauma, chalazion, chemical or thermal burn, retinal vascular problems, diabetes mellitus, developing or transient cataract or contact lenswear.
Pathologic Hyperopia
Conditions that cause the photoreceptor layer of the retina to project anteriorly (idiopathic central serous choroidopathy and choroidal hemangioma from SturgeWeber disease) also induce hyperopia. Orbital tumors, idiopathicchoroidal folds, and edema can mechanically distort the globe and press the retina anteriorly, thereby causing hyperopia. Cycloplegic agents may induce hyperopia by affecting accommodation, and a variety of other drugs can produce transient hyperopia.