Eye Problems In Kids

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  • #590434
    mybat
    Member

    I was wondering if anyone can share experiences with little kids and glasses?

    #659531
    d a
    Member

    All I can remember about my glasses was that they constantly broke. All the time.

    Also, my glasses were very thick and I wanted to get contacts. However my mother had trouble (like screaming, fighting ect.) with me and contacts when I was very young. Finally, I went on “glasses-strike”. I stopped wearing my glasses. For a year. Seeing that she had no choice, my mother took me to the doctor, and got me CONTACT LENSES!!!!

    The first time I put the lenses into my eyes, it was amazing!! I was able to see clearly! I was able to read!! It was a whole new world!!!!

    The doctor and interns taught how to put in and take out my lenses, and now I’m enjoying them!

    #659532
    ronrsr
    Member

    I got my first pair of glasses at five. They looked funny and I didn’t like them much.

    My younger brother, who was blessed with perfect vision, was envious of my glasses and cried, until the optician gave him a massive pair of glasses, w/o lenses.

    My sole consolation was he looked funnier than I did.

    #659533

    Positive or negative?

    My brother (3.5) wears glasses, or is supposed to wear glasses. He’s not so good about it. He’s going through a “break it” stage, so his glasses certainly got the brunt of it. But he won’t wear it unless he’s bribed to (at home, because in school they make him keep it on).

    But then it will also depend on the kid. My mother once asked someone how her kid kept her glasses on when she was little, and she said apparently, she had a high enough prescription that after a while (I think she got them before she was one) she realized that she can actually see better with them, so she started wearing them.

    My older brother on the other hand – his prescription was rising too quickly, so the eye doctor gave him lenses. (Back then before disposables.) He wore them for a while, then lost them at the mikva one erev shabbos. He’s been back to glasses ever since (like 10 years).

    #659534
    mybat
    Member

    Does anyone know about hypermetropy astigmatism or estravism it means that they can’t see well from close so without glasses they are cross eyed?

    #659535

    My brother was cross-eyed (he had surgery), and he has a positive prescription (he’s far-sighted), but I don’t know if they ever applied that term to it.

    #659536
    anonymouslysecret
    Participant

    I have had glasses since I was a baby. I remember wearing straps to hold my glasses in place… (they were really nerdy)

    Children’s glasses now have earpieces that wrap all the way around the ears. Some also have a cushion behind the nose piece so that if the child were to fall, the glasses would not break by the nose piece. They last a really long time.

    mybat: I was extremely far-sighted as a child and I did develop pretty bad wandering eyes as a result… I had surgery to correct them when I was really young and now they are perfectly straight B’H!

    #659537
    mybat
    Member

    Far sighted is that you can’t see well from close right?

    How old were you when the surgery was done?

    My sons doctor says we can’t correct the wandering eye because it corrects itself when he wears glasses. However when he takes off the glasses his eyes wander.

    #659538
    mybat
    Member

    I am asking this because I don’t live in the states so I don’t really know if the doc is telling me the truth or not and I probably will find a specialist in the USA if I see that the wandering eye could be corrected.

    My doctor says that he could make a lens transplant when my son is much older to correct the sight and the wandering eye.

    #659539

    Mybat I’m assuming you were responding to anonsecret, but far sighted is when you see better far (so you can’t see well from close).

    My brother also had the surgery – like when he was almost 2.5, but it was for cross-eye, not wandering.

    #659540
    anonymouslysecret
    Participant

    Yes. That is what far-sighted is.

    I was 5 when I had the surgery… but I have other immediate family members that have had it a lot earlier… I probably would have had it at the age of 3 if I would have found the surgeon earlier… (We tried a patch and glasses first… and then decided to operate…)

    But I’m not sure we are talking about the same condition because I had surgery on both eyes… so it wasn’t a typical case of a lazy eye… And mine did not 100 percent correct itself after I put on glasses. The surgery corrected it. I still do not have perfect depth perception (I cannot thread a needle and I consistently fail those eye tests with that fly whose wings pop up with the 3D glasses…)

    I went (and still go) to a really great pediatric eye specialist in Manhattan. He only sees children and adults who he operated on as children.

    #659541
    kapusta
    Participant

    I know someone with twin brothers. Both at a young age (3rd or 4th grade) were told to wear glasses. One was careful about wearing them and the other wasn’t. Today, the first one has a high prescription and the second one is still wearing the same prescription. They are in their 40’s.

    (Disclaimer: this is not for everyone)

    *kapusta*

    #659542
    anonymouslysecret
    Participant

    kapusta: That is not just a disclaimer! That is a HUGE disclaimer! YOu shouldn’t encourage anyone to not wear glasses… It can cause a lot more harm than benefit. And not all twins… even if they are biologically identical have the same prescription. There are many other factors aside from genetics that affect traits in a person. The birth process. The nutrients each received in the womb… Their genes may be the same… but any defect, mutation, or environmental factor may not be…

    #659543
    ronrsr
    Member

    mybat, I had a very severely wandering left eye when I was a youngster. In elementary school, I wore an occluder, a patch on the inside of my glasses, to block my use of the steadier eye.

    I was supposed to have an operation to correct it, but my mother got a second opinion from another opthalmologist and he said to wait, since there wasit may correct itself as I grew into adulthood.

    Indeed, he was right, and an operation was avoided. Once I became an adult, most of the problem went away. Now, when I am very tired, or look at myself in mirrors, my left eye will wander outward, but that’s merely a mild annoyance and a fascinating trick to show others, and not a problem.

    #659544
    ronrsr
    Member

    Da, I must put in a good word for contactr lenses. I am extremely nearsighted and my glasses were unsightly and difficult.

    At the age of sixteen, I got contact lenses, in the days before soft contact lenses. It was a miracle, put those little discs in your eyes, and you can see perfectly! I have been wearing hard lenses nonstop (actually, I take them out at night) and without problems, for almost forty years now, and still regard them as a miracle.

    Glasses and contact lenses are quite amazing. I think if the only historical mitigations for nearsightedness had been laser surgery and lens transplants, then someone invented glasses, which have almost no side-effects, the inventor would be awarded the Nobel Prize.

    #659545
    mybat
    Member

    Wow! Thanx eveyone! That is very helpful! I am going to find a specialist in the states for my son!

    He is far sighted and his eyes wander without the glasses so I worry about him!

    #659546
    anonymouslysecret
    Participant

    Mybat: Where are you from? (I assume you are not from the US if you are ‘finding a specialist in the states’) If you need any recommendations in the NY area… I’d be glad to help!

    #659547
    ronrsr
    Member

    how old is your son?

    #659548
    mybat
    Member

    Anonyous

    I am from…. A different country… Near the states and its not Canada.

    Ronrsr

    My son is 31/2 he’s been using glasses since he turned 2 and his prescription is very high!

    #659549
    cherrybim
    Participant

    Why not ask feivel; he’s an ophthalmologist.

    #659550
    Jax
    Member

    cherrybim: because feivel does not give fee consultations!

    (neither does mdlevine! ok that was a real old CR joke!)

    #659551
    mybat
    Member

    I don’t know where feivel is. Hmmmm.

    #659552
    feivel
    Participant

    im here

    im sorry, for me to attempt to answer a question like that, without detailed information and a report of the examination, would likely do more harm than good.

    #659553
    mybat
    Member

    Okay feivel thanx anyway! I just was wondering if it was worth going to a specialist in the states for a different opinion. I think I will look for someone. Thanx

    #659554
    feivel
    Participant

    a second opinion is always a good idea

    #659555
    mybat
    Member

    I just don’t trust the doctors so much where I live. A doctor in the USA is usually better.

    #659556
    Health
    Participant

    To Feivel,

    She wasn’t looking for a medical opinion, she was looking for a definition.

    To Mybat,

    It’s a good idea in your case to get a second opinion based on a physical exam, because of the possibility of surgery. Sometimes you need surgery in these types of cases, sometimes you don’t. You can go to Wills eye hospital in Phila.,Pa. They have pretty good pediatric specialtists. Look up contact info online.

    #659557
    mybat
    Member

    Thank you health! I will check out the clinic now.

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