Tink&SquirtsMom
<font color=red>Has a schnoodle<br><font color=blu
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2004
- Messages
- 2,309
We got a letter from my dd's kindergarten the other day saying she failed the eye exam, so I took her to our optometrist and she is 20/200 (which without correction is legally blind) in her right eye and 20/80 in left eye. The Dr. is concerned about amblyopia, which from my reading it sounds like she has, but he said we could still prevent it. She is favoring her left eye and not using her right eye. I'm concerned about her developing a wandering eye. We're starting her on glasses immediately but not at full strength because it would be to much for her. She'll be at full strength in 6 months. We'll also be patching her "good" eye (not that 20/80 is good) to help develop her bad eye. I'm taking her to visit a pediatric opthamologist to see if she can offer any other suggestions. I'm shocked by this diagnosis as my dd is reading and writing at her grade level and I NEVER would have suspected vision problems, let alone this severe. I'm interested in hearing other peoples experiences with this sort of thing. And anyone else please think about getting your young children checked. The prognosis for this is much better if found before age 5 (dd is 5 1/2), and I so wish someone had recommended to me to have a routine eye exam by an optometrist (she passed her peds eye exam) done earlier. I'm taking ds (3) in next week.
We also got a letter from her school saying that her vision was 20/400 in one eye and 20/50 (or 60) in the other. I questioned how the child could have possibly gotten through 5 years like that and it was not detected before then and they said that she was probably born with it and did know any better. We patched the good eye to force her to use the bad eye and started iwth VERY thick gasses. It was not a pleasent experience but one that worked. She still wears glass, (when I force her to!) and her vision is about 20/60 a HUGE improvement but they say that this is the best that we can hope for. As far as she is concerned she is JUST FINE as she constantly reminds me.
My son Christian has a different problem than your child(cortical vision impairment), but he also had to wear a patch. At that time he was about 2yo and his eyes went in different directions. Not to mention that he was missing the whole left field of vision. Poor kid, sometimes he would just shut his eyes so he wouldn't have to see--it was actually painful for him. His vision went from really terrible to useful with only 6 months of patching. He's 10 now and can use his eyes to locate anything he wants. Pretty good for a "legally blind" kid 
if it turns in too much (does that make sense the way I explained it?). So we don't want the turning inward! And you can really tell...a few weeks ago a lense fell out of his good glasses right before soccer practice, and I didn't have his backup pair--he practiced without and you could really tell the eye was going in.