My annual
visit to the ophthalmologist was today, three months after his colleague had
done cataract surgery on my right eye.
The surgery
has had its upside (I’m not wearing glasses most of the time) and its downside
(the glasses I wear for computer use don’t focus very well). I wanted to ask
Dr. O., why? Were the glasses fitted improperly? Was there a problem with the
surgery?
Dr. O.
checked my glasses, then checked my vision reading the eye chart. After the
surgery, my right eye is close to 20/20 for distance, while my left eye is
still myopic, but I can read with it at about an eight-inch distance. Wearing
the glasses got me to 20/20 with each eye, but, I explained to Dr. O., when I
looked at the chart with both eyes, I saw two images and had to move my head
around to just one spot to focus properly.
He gave me
an explanation about diopters, which made no sense to me, and when I asked him
to explain, at first he said, you don’t need to know that. What I needed to know,
he said, was the before the surgery, each of my eyes had a different diopter,
and the difference was quite great. Now the difference was less, so it was
supposed to be better.
But it
wasn’t.
I pressed
Dr. O. to explain more thoroughly, and he came up with an explanation that I
now understood. The diopter measurement refers to where each eye focuses, and in theory it determines what your
correction should be to focus properly. When I wore contact lenses (for 40
years), the contact lenses fixed the focus problem, I think because the lens
fits right onto the lens of my eye. When I could no longer wear the contacts
because my eyes were too dry, I didn’t notice the focus problem because,
apparently, my brain was accommodating by relying only on my left eye because
of the cataract in the right. Now that the cataract was gone, what hadn’t been
perceived by my brain as a problem had become apparent as a problem.
So
a problem I hadn’t been aware of – the cataract – became a problem I was aware of after fixing the problem I
wasn’t aware of. At least I don’t have to wear glasses all the time, a net
gain, as far as I’m concerned. Ain’t science grand?
And ain't aging grand! I feel your pain.
ReplyDeleteThat's so frustrating! It's possible that your brain will readjust around this new (old) problem once it gets used to how to focus. I'm still surprised that my brain has gotten used to distance with one eye, near stuff with the other, but apparently, that's a thing brains do. Good luck!
ReplyDeletethat latter is what my brain is adjusting to, distance one eye, reading the other. I can read my phone and iPad up close, but not the computer. And I'm going to test out driving next week.
ReplyDelete