This is the training of a neuro-ophthalmologist: 4 years college, 4 years medical school, 1 year internship, 3 years ophthalmology, 1 or 2 year fellowship in neuro-ophthalmology. They are more ophthalmologist than neurolgoist. There special skills are in diagnosis of vagues, obscure, confusing symptoms.
You would tell him/her the same things that you wrote about in this forum. They would work to get a diagnosis and if possible treatment. Mind you entoptic phenomena are normal and there is no treatment for them
JCH III MD
Hey Can u explain me that whts the neuroophthalmologist means is the eyes doctor or brain doctor
Ok What specific things do i ask him
Like wht
Please
thank u
There is no treatment for entoptic phenomenon. If you can't relax and want to keep digging see a neuroophthalmologist.
JCH III MD
i forget to tell that when i see a bright wall or a even a car i see tiny bright light moving all around the cars and even the wall
and when i see a plain wall i see very tiny dots are stuck or fixed in the eyes where even i see and when i close my eyes then also i see that tiny dots in eye close
i read some post about this but i thought that asking agian would be better for me
r there dangerous to my eyes or low vision in futher please help me about wht to do now any treatment for this !
thanku
They are not dangerous. We all have them. Do a little reading on Wikipedia.com
JCH MD
Why r u not replying me u r freaking me out !!!!!!
thank u
But r there dangerous to my eyes or make my eyes vision low or some thing like that please explain me
I am freaky out with this ?
please help me ?
Computer use and computer games are not bad for the eye, will not damage the eye but may cause some eye discomfort, tearing, watering and "tired eyes'.
The things you're describing and a very frequent reason for posting her are entopic phenomena. There are over a dozen different types.
Please use an internet search engine to see a listing of the different types and illustrations of same "entoptic phenomena" or "entopic phenomena". Most of this stuff is background noise in a normal eye and is best tuned out.
JCH III MD