We often take it for granted that our children see as well as we do. This may not be the case if your child has a lazy eye. Normal vision develops early in life when the brain learns to fuse the images from both the left and right eye forming a single image, what is referred to as binocularity. Lazy eye or amblyopia, on the other hand, is a reduction in vision that results from abnormal visual development in infancy and early childhood. Amblyopia is the leading cause of decreased vision among children affecting 2 to 3 per cent of the population.
Amblyopia develops when the nerve pathways between the brain and eye are not properly stimulated. As a result, the brain favors the eye with the clearer image and turns off or blocks the image from the eye with poor vision. Turning off an eye is called suppression. As the brain suppresses the lazy eye early in life, clear vision does not have a chance to develop and both eyes are not used together effectively resulting in reduced binocularity. Most cases of amblyopia affect only one eye, but some cases are bilateral. Lazy eye is hereditary and commonly seen among children born prematurely or with a low birth weight or who have a family history of childhood cataracts or a serious eye disease.
There are three common causes of lazy eye:
1. Strabismic. The most common cause of lazy eye is strabismus (eye turn or wandering eye), an imbalance in the muscles responsible for aligning the eyes resulting in one eye pointing in or out, up or down. When the eyes are not aligned, two different images are being sent to the brain resulting in double vision. The brain is then forced to turn off the image coming from the misaligned eye to create a single image. The child only uses their straight eye to see, and vision in the turned eye does not have a chance to develop.
2. Deprivation. The most severe type of amblyopia in terms of vision loss resulting from an obstruction that ‘deprives’ the child of clear vision in the eye. Examples include a cloudy area in the lens (cataract), droopy eyelid or opacity.
3. Refractive. The result of a significant difference between the vision in each eye, due to nearsightedness, farsightedness or an imperfection on the surface of the eye (astigmatism) making it difficult for the eyes to focus together. An infant has no way of telling their parents one of their eyes does not see as clear as the other. Since it is difficult for the visual system to fuse a clear image with a blurred image, the brain learns to suppress the blurred eye causing vision to stop developing in that eye.
Signs and symptoms of lazy eye include:
• An eye that wanders in or out, up or down
• Eyes that may not appear to work together
• Poor depth perception (3D vision)
Early eye examination is key to detection and diagnosis
Optometrists begin to see children as early as six months of age to screen for lazy eye and eye turns. Alberta Health and Wellness covers yearly eye examinations for children under the age of 18. As part of the examination, a through-all medical, ocular and family history is taken; visual acuity is assessed for each eye looking for differences in vision between the eyes or a reduced vision; tests are done to check focusing, binocularity, eye teaming, eye tracking, the need for correction, such as glasses and/or contact lenses; and an ocular health assessment.
If a child is diagnosed with amblyopia – depending on the cause and the degree to which the vision is affected - treatment options can include corrective eyewear, such as glasses and/or contact lenses to help equalize the vision in both eyes; eye patches to stimulate the weaker eye; eye drops to temporarily blur vision in the stronger eye in order to encourage the use of the weaker eye; vision therapy or eye exercises to help establish binocularity; focusing and eye tracking; and/or surgery to align the eye muscles or correct the droopy eyelid or remove the cataract. Ideally, the earlier the treatment is initiated, the better the outcome as the connections between the eye and brain are forming. If amblyopia is left untreated, lazy eye can cause permanent vision loss.
See your optometrist today for your child’s eye examination.
Dr. Farrah Sunderji, OD, completed her Optometry degree from the New England College of Optometry followed by a residency in Pediatrics and Vision Therapy at the Southern California College of Optometry. Her practice, Eyedeology, is located in the Centennial Clinic, #245, 520 - 3 Avenue SW, a multi-disciplinary centre that practices an integrated approach to health care. Accepting new patients. For more information on children’s vision, check out her website at www.eyedeology.ca.
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