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Amblyopia/Strabismus Allison D. Lyerly, OD Dr. Allison Lyerly is an optometrist with Carolina Center for Eye Care. She has a passion for children and a wealth of experience with learning related visual problems, amblyopia, and strabismus. If your child is experiencing difficulty in the classroom, with sports, or if you have questions on how binocular vision training would benefit your child, please feel free to contact Dr. Lyerly. Advance: (336) 940-2015 Lewisville: (336) 946-0203 Amblyopia, also referred to as “lazy eye”, is an eye condition resulting in reduced vision. There are many causes of amblyopia. The most common are: Strabismic Amblyopia: This type of amblyopia results when an “eye turn” is present. If the two eyes do not aim at the same place, the brain will suppress (block, ignore) the turned eye so as to avoid confusion and/or double vision. When the brain ignores the turned eye, adequate vision from that eye will not develop on its own. Refractive Amblyopia: This condition occurs when one eye sees clearly and the other eye needs a rather large glasses prescription in order to see clearly. The brain will ignore the blurrier eye and adequate vision will not develop on its own. This is one of the hardest types of amblyopia to detect because many times the child will not notice the blurry eye. o o In some children, if the refractive amblyopia is large enough, an eye turn may actually develop as well. In other children, both eyes may have a larger glasses prescription and amblyopia can develop in each eye. The brain will choose to use the eye with the lower prescription because it will see a bit clearer than the other eye. According to researchers at New York University's Center for Neural Science, amblyopia is the most common neurological defect of vision in children and adults and affects 1-3 percent of the population. Many are unaware that amblyopia is a neurological deficit, not a problem with how the eye itself works. Can surgery help to correct a “lazy eye”? No surgery can correct the vision in an amblyopic eye. For children who have an eye turn, a cosmetic surgery may be performed to help reduce the angle of the eye turn; however, this only realigns the eye muscles and does NOT solely improve vision. Before a “muscle surgery” is ever performed treatment options directed specifically toward vision improvement should be exhausted before surgery is considered. Binocular Vision Training (BVT) Q: What is BVT? A: Binocular vision training (BVT) is an individualized treatment program designed to improve visual skills that cannot be effectively treated with glasses, contact lenses, or surgery alone. At Insight, patients work one-on-one with our doctor and therapists to achieve the vision necessary to navigate everyday challenges. Q: How would BVT help strabismus or amblyopia? A: Binocular vision training is based on the concepts of neuroplasticity. Since amblyopia is a deficit in the neurological system, treatment is aimed at strengthening the visual channel that is being suppressed. Many doctors will passively “patch the good eye” to get better vision out of the “weaker eye”. Patching therapy, alone, does not produce the best visual outcomes. Even if better vision is achieved out of the “weaker eye”, the brain does not know how to properly use both eyes together. Often, this results in the brain suppressing the “weaker eye” again. Suppression leads to poor depth perception, stereo blindness and other associated symptoms. BVT works toward the goal of excellent vision WITH excellent eye teaming abilities. Q: How do I know if my child would benefit from BVT? A: When visiting your optometrist, it is important to tell them how your child is performing at school and in sports. A comprehensive eye examination looks at many aspects of your child's visual health, but certain testing is only completed if an eye teaming problem is suspected. A second, more in depth evaluation of your child's visual system is often required to determine the type of eye teaming difficulty that may be present. Great vision is so much more than "20/20". Please alert your optometrist to any reading or school related difficulties your child may have. Every child deserves to have the best visual foundation for a lifetime of learning. Q: What is depth perception and why is it important? A: Depth perception is the ability to judge distance between objects or see the world as three dimensional. Depth perception requires an individual to point both eyes at the same target with CLEAR vision. Then, the brain must fuse the two images received by each eye in order to perceive depth. Those with amblyopia often lack depth perception and must employ other cues to judge distances, making their depth perception less accurate. Without accurate depth perception children can experience difficulties in learning, reading, driving, and sports. Many careers require certain levels of depth perception as well (pilot, surgeon, sports, etc). Q: My previous doctor said that my child would not benefit from BVT or patching because they have passed the “critical age period”. A: Many doctors believe that there is a “critical age” past which the brain’s neuroplasticity cannot be shaped to result in better vision and depth perception. Although it is easier to treat amblyopia at an earlier age, age is NOT a barrier. See the below article on Sue Barry, a neuroscientist who started vision therapy to treat her amblyopia during her 40’s! Q: What does ophthalmology think about binocular vision treatment? A: Opthalmologists agree, current patching treatments are effective in improving acuity. However, many children are left with residual vision deficits, ocular motor abnormalities, deficient fine motor skills and a risk for recurrent amblyopia. The Pediatric Eye Disease Investigator Group (PEDIG) is currently working on a controlled, randomized trial to demonstrate the benefits of binocular therapy in treating amblyopia/strabismus. Helpful Therapy Links Below is a list of websites that are helpful in researching BVT and amblyopia/strabismus. College of Optometrists in Vision Development o http://www.covd.org/ What is Vision Therapy? o http://www.visiontherapy.org/ Vision Help o http://www.visionhelp.com/ New Approaches to Amblyopic Treatment o https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3577063/ The Wow Vision Therapy Blog o http://wowvision.typepad.com/ Jillian's Story o http://www.jilliansstory.com/ Susan R. Barry-author of Fixing My Gaze Fixing My Gaze is an inspirational book by neuroscientist, Susan Barry, who was born with strabismus (an eye turn) and had lived all her life without stereo vision, meaning that she could not see in three dimensions. Her case was also the subject of an article by Oliver Sacks titled "Stereo Sue" published in the New Yorker. She had three surgeries to "correct" the eye turn cosmetically but she still could not see properly and the eye was still turned, although less than before. She had lived this way for over 40 years until she met optometrist Dr. Theresa Ruggiero. Dr. Ruggiero treated Susan with vision therapy which corrected the eye turn and allowed her see in three dimensions for the first time in her life. Can you imagine how her world was transformed? Here is what Susan Barry said in an interview with Scientific American about how the world looked different after vision therapy: "For the first time, I could see the volumes of space between different tree branches, and I liked immersing myself in those inviting pockets of space. As I walk about, leaves, pine needles, and flowers, - even light fixtures and ceiling pipes - seem to float on a medium more substantial than air. Snow no longer appears to fall in one plane slightly in front of me. Now, the snowflakes envelope me, floating by in layers and layers of depth. It's been seven years since I gained stereo vision, but ordinary views like these still fill me with a deep sense of wonder and joy." Susan Barry's story is remarkable in that she was in mid-life when she received vision therapy. The conventional wisdom, now being disproved by new studies, was that after a "critical period" around the age of 7 or 8, the brain could not be trained (or "rewired") to see in new ways. The old scientific thinking was that after early childhood, the brain became fixed. In fact, Susan Barry herself and other scientists thought that it was impossible for her to ever see in 3D. Now, we know that the brain exhibits neuroplasticity and that given the proper behavioral therapy, even adults can rewire their brains. This has given hope to many people who did not receive treatment for visual processing disorders at a young age. Now it seems possible that even older patients with amblyopia or strabismus and other binocular vision disorders can benefit from treatments like vision therapy. You can hear interviews with Susan Barry and read more about her story at her website: http://www.fixingmygaze.com/.