Author Information
Authored by Sheraz Daya MD FACP FACS FRCS(Ed) FRCOphth, Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon & Medical Director, June 2019.
Next review due June 2025.
This page briefly describes the various conditions that result in the need for glasses or contact lenses and will help understand the various Vision Correction treatments available at Centre for Sight.
Good knowledge is important and we hope you find this material useful in understanding why you need glasses or contact lenses. Links are provided to give you more detail about each specific condition.
The eye is very similar to a camera and it will be useful to refer to the diagrams below. The cornea and lens are similar to the lens in the camera. Both the eye and camera has an iris which controls the amount of light that enters the eye.
Light rays enter the eye and 60 to 70% of the focus is performed by the front clear part of the eye, the cornea. The remaining 30 to 40% of focus is by the lens inside the eye. The retina is similar to the film of the camera and light rays need to come to point of focus on this structure at the back of the eye. Information from the retina which has photoreceptors (rods and cones) is passed to the optic nerve and then on to the brain where information is processed very much like a computer and the information is turned into vision. To see well light rays must be at a point focus in the eye.
If the eye is too long or short or the cornea too flat or steep, light rays focus in a place other than the retina and the information transmitted to the brain is poor and interpreted as a blur. This is called a refractive error of which there are 4 types:
This is where vision without glasses is quite good up close (sometimes very close) but poor at distance.
Click here to learn more about shortsightedness.
This is where vision is clear at distance and often clear at near. Farsighted people often report having fantastic vision when they were young and then with advancing age, near vision become blurry and in time distance vision also becomes worsens with the need for glasses for both near and distance.
Click here to learn more about farsightedness.
This is found in combination with either SHORTSIGHT or FARSIGHT. There are two focal points of the eye and this occurs because the cornea is shaped like a rugby ball rather than a soccer ball. There are two powers on the cornea and light rays in one or both areas of the cornea may focus inside or outside the eye. This means the retina picks up a blurred image.
Click here to learn more about astigmatism.
Beyond the age of 40 the lens inside the eye becomes harder and does not move as easily. This lens is necessary for near focus and if it cannot change shape, near focus becomes a problem. Glasses or bifocals are needed with extra power to compensate for this loss of lens function. Click for more detail: Presbyopia
There are a number of options available to treat all kinds of eye conditions, but they generally fall into 3 categories.
Click here to learn more about presbyopia.
Authored by Sheraz Daya MD FACP FACS FRCS(Ed) FRCOphth, Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon & Medical Director, June 2019.
Next review due June 2025.