Eye Problems

Refractive Errors

Refractive errors occur when the eyes are unable to focus on the light properly.

Lazy Eye

Lazy eye, also known as amblyopia, when one eye’s vision doesn’t develop properly, and the brain begins to favor the eye with proper vision. This may affect both eyes. This disease may appear in infants, children, and adults.

Color Blindness

In color blindness, you cannot see particular colors. You can’t differentiate between them. It happens when your color cells (cones) are not working properly or when your color cells are absent.

Night Blindness

Night blindness implies an eye problem in which a person experiences difficulty in seeing areas with low light or at night.

Cataracts

This is one of the most common eye conditions which may be in adults or babies.

In adults
Cataracts are commonly classified as a degenerative eye disease because they are commonly found in people having an age of 65 or more.

In babies
Usually, babies are born with a clear lens. Some babies, when born, have a milky white lens which too opaque and cloudy that it prevents light passing through the lens. Therefore, the object cannot be focused on the retina and clear image cannot be formed. This condition is known as “congenital cataracts.”

Glaucoma

Glaucoma is the condition in which the optic nerve is damaged. It includes all kind of conditions that are connected to damaging of the optic nerve.

Bulging Eyes

Bulging eyes is also known as “proptosis”. In this condition, one or both the eyes protrude from the eye sockets and cause more of the cornea to be exposed in the air. Bulging eyes put a lot of pressure on the optic nerve which may lead to blindness.

Retinal Detachment

In retinal detachment, the retina of the eye becomes separated from the back of the eye which means that retina is separated from nerve tissues and the blood vessels beneath them and may lead to vision loss or blindness.