Low Vision Eye Care

Low Vision Eye Care Low Vision Eye Care for the Visually Impaired Providing Low Vision Care to the Visually Impaired

04/27/2017

How Vision Works with Homonymous Hemianopia

Hemianopia (without an s) and hemianopsia (with an s) are one and the same condition. In Australia and the United Kingdom, web searches are done almost entirely using hemianopia. In the rest of the world, hemianopsia is the preferred spelling. In the interest of catering to the entire world’s internet inquiries, we will be using both spellings interchangeably.

Homonymous hemianopsia is a common vision condition, affecting 1 in 3 stroke patients. It can also be a side effect of certain brain surgeries and abnormalities.

While the normal person has about 180 degrees of field, a patient with homonymous hemianopia has their visual field cut roughly in half.

A patient with hemianopsia is misses their entire visual field on one side. Photos often depict the missing field in hemianopia as being black or white. This is not how the missing field is perceived to the patient. The missing field isn’t seen as black or white. It just isn’t there.

Challenges for patients with hemianopia

As you can probably imagine, if you were missing the entire left side of your vision, this would pose some problems. The biggest quality of life concerns for patients with hemianopia are mobility, driving, and reading.

Mobility

The visual field acts as a shield from impending obstacles. A person with a normal field of 180 degrees can proactively detect obstacles in their visual field that can possibly interfere with mobility, and consciously avoid them.

A person with homonymous hemianopia has lost that shield on one side. This blind side will offer no natural obstacle detection, leaving the blind side at constant risk to oncoming dangers.

Reading

When a person with normal vision reads, their peripheral vision guides them along the line of reading, and to the beginning of the next line so they do not lose their place. Patients with hemianopia have challenges reading. The challenge is different depending on the side of their field loss. A patient with left hemianopsia will often have trouble finding the beginning of a reading line. They may start reading the next line of text without going all the way to the beginning of it. A patient with right hemianopia may read just the beginning of a word without reading the entire word. Both of these scenarios make reading very difficult for a person with hemianopsia.

Driving

The ability to drive is compromised by hemianopia. Awareness of surroundings is limited by the restricted visual field, making driving itself difficult. To compound this, many states and countries require drivers to meet minimum visual field requirements. Depending on the state, the field requirement can be anywhere from 105 to 140 degrees, which cannot be met by patients with homonymous hemianopsia.

04/03/2017

Blue light filter selection is complicated. A blue filter may help you with many problems: computer eye strain (computer vision syndrome), LED & fluorescent light sensitivity, sleep disorder, a…

03/15/2017

E Scoop Glasses for Driving
E Scoop eyeglasses are one of the newest devices for patients with low vision. They were developed in The Netherlands, for macular degeneration patients. They have been available in the US for just over a year. The glasses make things viewed slightly larger, improve contrast and allow the wearer to use an area of the retina which is healthier than their diseased macula. The result is improved vision without telescopic glasses.

An Idaho patient came to me hoping to get her drivers permit back. Her better eye, the left, corrected to 20/120 with glasses and there was no usable vision in the right. That is not good enough to drive in Idaho or any other state.

Today she picked up the E Scoop glasses and was able to read 20/50 with the left eye. That meets the state's requirements and I certified her to drive daylight hours wearing the glasses. If she did not have the E Scoops she would have lost her license or been required to drive with bioptic telescopic glasses. The E Scoops provide more natural vision, are less expensive and do not require a special license like bioptics.

The E Scoop glasses may be the perfect option for someone whose vision is not severely damaged. Someone who comes close to passing the vision requirement to drive but can't quite make it. If you are in that situation low vision glasses, including the E Scoops, may be the answer to getting you safely back on the road.

02/24/2017

Did you know you can pay your post-care balance online using your CareCredit credit card? Financing options available. carecredit.com/pay

Introducing E-Scoop: The Night Driving SolutionNIGHT VISION: A GLARING CONCERNLow vision at night occurs as a result of ...
02/01/2017

Introducing E-Scoop: The Night Driving Solution
NIGHT VISION: A GLARING CONCERN
Low vision at night occurs as a result of both bright and dim lights. Bright
lighting causes eyes to squint and become teary. Dim lighting reduces the
contrast of images.
Research shows 1 in 12 people have trouble driving at night.

HOW E-SCOOP® WORKS
E-Scoop® glasses were developed to bridge the gap between standard
eyeglasses and head borne telescopes. Whether the difficulty be night
driving, bright light, sunlight, or simply seeing clearly in the distance, the
E-Scoop® lens will help your patient see better.
Five basic properties work together for unique and measurable results:
Prism
Base curve
Custom tint
Lens thickness
Coating

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