Good afternoon,
I’ve had this problem with my eyes for just about as long as I can remember. Basically, when I look right with both eyes, one of them wanders, depending on which one I focus. Naturally, my vision goes
doubleDouble-tussin dm when this happens. It doesn’t happen looking left, only right. I’ve grown accustomed to compensating by shutting one eye or just turning my
headHead and face reconstruction
Head injury
Head lice
Indications of head injury
Radial head injury (like when driving, etc..) My forward and left vision is fine and I experience no
doubleDouble-tussin dm vision looking forward or looking left. I finally got good eye insurance, so I decided after many years to get it checked out. The eye doctor prescribed me eyeglasses with prisms. My question is about the prisms: It seems to me that the prisms are
simplySimply sleep tricking my eyes. Now when I look right, my vision doesn’t go
doubleDouble-tussin dm, but my eye still wanders. This is not at all what I wanted. I want them to line up properly. I guess I am just fishing for a second opinion on my options. Will the prisms eventually help with this? Does this sound like something only surgery will fix? Is this something that can’t be fixed?
Thanks in
advanceAdvance care plus
Advance relief.
i agree that a visit to a pediatric ophthalmologist is probably not a bad idea.
the forum ophthalmologist stated the following:
"Prisms glasses do not work well on incommitant strabismus"
that is completely true. i completely agree with that statement. but guess what? surgery doesnt usually work well in adults with incommitant strabismus, either. but of course the surgeons will recommend surgery and the non-surgeons will recommend prisms. both are viable options, neither is likely to work all that well in anyone over about age 8 IMO.
but a visit to a surgeon is not a bad idea. you've tried the prisms and are not all that satisfied, now go hear the other side. i'd be wary of any surgeon who promised he/she could fix this quickly and easily, however. it is my understanding that surgery is not usually indicated nor successful in duane's syndrome and the like.