I think one on hearing would also be useful. Is it really inevitable that we lose our hearing when we age? Is it a sign of dementia? Why are those with poor hearing more at risk of dementia?
No being able to hear is bad for your brain. Also, people that don't hear well tend to isolate themself from others. This being "cut off" from the world is a huge risk factor to develop dementia!
I wonder if diet is connected with hearing loss (besides trauma) as it is with dementia. Because genetics can be dormant or triggered according to one’s diet more or less
That's simple. Loud noises of any sort can damage hearing. To protect hearing don't listen to music too loud, particularly on earphones/earbuds,and if operating loud machinery use ear protecters
I am glad to hear that blue light isn't actually damaging. My full time job is working on the computer,but I never opted to get the blue light filter which would always shock my optometrist. But the truth is, I need to see colours correctly with my job and the filter interferes with that too much. I was always worried I was choosing to ruin my eyes to be able to pay my bills 😅
Blue light by itself is not dangerous, but the narrow band blue light peak emitted by most LED backlit screens is. It's high intensity of light concentrated in very narrow spectrum. If it was spread out over wider frequency band (like natural light sources), then it wouldn't have such high toxicity for the tissue.
they didn't say blue light isn't damaging to your eyesight or health, they just said there is no reasearch can claim such thing as to right now meaning there is no reaserch who shows blue light is damaging or not dammging to the eyesight therefore blue light can still be damaging and you simpley don't know it yet.
@@lala-bp3wh bruh they just said our eyes have protection against blue light. She even mentioned specifically that we have "Lutein and Zeaxanthin" in our eyes that protects us from blue light. The only reason why it affects our eyes is when we use gadgets before sleep causing insomnia or when we forgot to blink.
Regardless of 'damaging' eyes, when I got blue light filter glasses I stopped experiencing eye strain/twitching. My eyes would always start twitching around 2 o'clock at work. I got blue light filters over a year ago and haven't had the problem since. I won't be switching back just to save a few bucks.
they just say there is no proof that it does damage your eyes, what they say blue light does affect you differently like can give you insomina but those bluefilter just helps in making you feel comfortable and help with light sensitivity
Contacts can't got lost behind the eye, but they can get lost at the top. Happened to me when I first was getting them in 7th grade. The first time one somehow got stuck past my eye lid and when I was putting on the replacement, it fell out and the doc was like I've never seen that before. The floaters one is the most scary to me because my current eye doctor told me that the vein to my eye is pretty thin and said my eye could fall out if it gets thin enough, so if I start to see more and more floaters, to contact her ASAP.
The problem is that the retina, the patch of nerve cells at the back of the inside of the eye, which react to light and without which we can't see,needs a good blood supply. If something interrupts that blood supply, such as damage to the capillaries (very small blood vessels)that carry blood to the retina,then those cells can be damaged. Once the retina is damaged,there is nothing that can be done to fix it. BUT, there are things that can be done to improve the blood supply before that happens/re attach your retina if it detaches ,such as laser surgery. If you have bad floaters,this can mean there is damage to the capillaries, though generally it doesn't. But an eye check is a good idea . If you have bad floaters,then suddenly loose an area of sight in your eye,like a dark spot that doesn't move,you need to seek treatment straight away,as you DO have damage to the capillaries/a detached retina The sooner you get treatment, the more likely it is that your retina/its blood supply can be repaired and your sight will be fine Never take chances with your sight
The top, sides, and bottom. Basically the contact won't go all the way behind the eye, but it can get stuck anywhere around the edges as far back as your conjunctiva connects. It happens to me fairly often (as in a few times a year), usually when my eyes are really dry and the contact catches on my eye lid and rolls up.
I was literally "prescribed" eye exercises by my ophthalmologist. He said my problem wasn't myopia but rather exhaustion of my eye muscles, which was later confirmed by a dysautonomia specialist. I'm wondering if maybe there are cases where eye exercises or eye rests do help, or whether my eye doctor was simply misinformed.
They stated that eye exercises don't help with myopia and other vision-impairing conditions; so if a professional told you that it wasn't myopia and rather a specific problem with your eye muscles than eye exercises can probably help somewhat since it has to do with your muscles. What they mean is that eye exercises won't help you with said conditions, or magically improve your vision from where it is now. It can help with eye strain.
From my experience, when I checked my myopia in the morning and evening, the numbers are different. It is very recommended to check your eyes early of the day, otherwise your eyes are tired during eye check in the evening and lead to inaccurate numbers.
I can't believe none of my eye doctors told me that Polarized lenses don't necessarily block UV. I've lived in high UV places most of my life and have worked outdoors. I was so careful to get polarized lenses because I'd been told by family members those were the most effective against UV. Only now am I learning I could've been better protecting my eyes this whole time!
One thing I learned from experience is that the glasses won't make your vision worse, BUT since I got my glasses way too late (in my 20s) I had already gotten used to not seeing right(shortsighted + astigmatism). Then as I started to wear them every waking hour, I got used to seeing perfectly fine. So now, when I take them off, I trip and run into stuff more often than I did before, but that is not because I see worse but because I am no longer compensating by being exceptionally careful. I think that often causes people to mistakenly believe their vision got worse.
How do you know glasses won't make your vision worse? Do you know excessive near work leads to myopia? Aren't you familiar with primate studies 30 years where they had minus lenses put in front of their eyes, and they developed myopia. Hard to fight the general ignorant public that doesn't want to hear anything/do his own research about this subject. 1.Take 100 7 year old kids who are illiterate and check their vision 2-3 years after 2.Take 100 7 year old kids who do 10hrs reading at 30cm and check their vision 2-3 years after 3.Take 100 7 year old kids who are always outside but are put with -3.00D minus lenses and check their naked vision 2-3 years after. scenario 2+3 = Myopia, and this is proven by science.
@@DoubleOpposite You seem to be completely unable to de-tangle how causal relationships work. But it's okay. Watch the video again, maybe you'll understand it this time around, although I highly doubt that.
@@DoubleOpposite You do realise that if people started off with perfect vision and wore the lenses long term, their eyes would actually adjust to lenses and end up inducing myopia? The monkey and the kids wearing the minus lenses scenarios are not really proving that nearwork causes myopia because the lenses are already a huge factor, so perhaps reference more examples where they only have nearwork activities involved in the experiment to better support your argument.
If something hits your eye but you’re eye is closed will not end up getting low vision. I rinsed something off my eye lids in the shower today and I had water fall on my face for five minutes and my mom told me that water from a shower falling on your eyes could cause permeant damage and oh dear I had shower water fall on my face for five minutes but my eyes were closed the whole time I did it. If someone rinses his or her face under shower water for five minutes with shower water with his or her eyes closed would the water falling on your face still damage the person’s eyes and cause the person to get low vision even though the person’s eyes were shut while the water was falling on the person’s face?
My friend kept seeing floaters and when she got herself checked, it turned out it was blood and found out she has a growth in her brain. Always get yourself checked when something feels off.
In other cases.. if you keep seeing one, two floaters or more.. it could be the early sign of retinal detachment.. which is could lead to permanent blindness if not do any early treatment.. do check to your ophthalmologist.. not optometrist
It may not be damaging, but as someone who spends 60-80 hours a week in front of screens, I had noticably reduced eye fatigue, and general eye strain, when I started using glasses with a filter. The filter isn't even really noticeable on day-to-day things either, it just takes the edge off and makes a huge difference for me.
While it certainly is unusual, it's not impossible to sneeze with your eyes open. I was recently diagnosed with a condition called Bell's Palsy, where one half of my face experienced muscles weakness. One of the symptoms included a weakened eyelid and blink reflex, so when I sneezed, I was fully able to see out of that eye every time. It was rather uncomfortable, and luckily healed up soon after, but because of that I can say that I have sneezed with one eye open.
Exactly, when I heard as a kid that one couldn't sneeze with their eyes open, I literally held my eyelids while I sneezed just to prove I could, and I still have both eyes
It's hard when you're driving and you're about to sneeze because you have to keep focused on the road, just closing your eyes for a second can be frightening.
Lasik: I had LASIK twice. I was 5/200 prior to Lasik. Went to 20/15, back to 10/20, before the revision. My eyes have settled to a very mild near-sighted again. I hover around 15/20 or -0.75 in both eyes now. I would love not needing glasses, but at least now I'm not legally blind if I forget them at home. The procedure did fix an astigmatism that was developing!
@@rg9991 I believe 5/200 means that the smallest thing he can see from 5 feet away, a normal person could see the same thing from 200 feet away. So imagine a huge sign on the streets, this person would have to be 5 feet away to see the huge sign that a normal person can see from across the street.
@@rg9991 20/800. Lasik is a terrible idea. You're fundamentally damaging the structure of already delicate tissues. They'll fail progressively over time and studies are just starting to show this.
@@TARS.. my both eyes are around -4.25-4.5 the last time I checked. Though I'm not blind, I can survive in the house without the glasses and can perform the daily routine, there's no way I can last a few hours outside as I can't see shit.
Commenting to boost the algorithm. I'm a COA in Arizona and more patients need to see this video. Very well done, very comprehensive, and of course very accurate. Thank you to the production team and the doctors.
@daniyal chaudhry Nice try with the sarcasm deceiver. Eye exercises work and the only proof that they don't is the fact that optometrists refuse to study them because it would lose them tons of sales.
Thanks for debunking the blue light myth. I was tired of seeing the green tint so when I got a new pair of lenses I purposefully opted for plain glasses and that helped me to save Rs300 (that's like 4 dollars). My Doctor said I should keep using blue light glasses but I just refused and now thanks to you I am more than sure that I made the right choice.
Same, the shop I went to kept pestering me to "upgrade" the blue light lens but I feel so sleepy using them so I went for the normal version and saved $100!
It's not a myth. These two medical doctors, like most medical doctors, wildly unscientific, are clueless about the basic science and cannot even infer a truly logical consequence of the hypothesis that they wish to refute [01:16]. The conclusion that blue light damages eyes owes to decades of research. One could question much of the data's clinical relevance to freeliving humans. But these medical doctors spout nonsense by reducing it all to a myth due to media report of a 2018 study on cells not even retinal. And refuting the hypothesis by alleging that it entails a "pandemic of blindness" is sheer inanity. - E Zrenner, "[Light-induced damage to the eye]", _Fortschr Ophthalmol,_ 1990;87 Suppl:S41-51. PMID 2083911 Peep V Algvere, John Marshall, Stefan Seregard, "Age-related maculopathy and the impact of blue light hazard", _Acta Ophthalmol Scand,_ 2006 Feb;84(1):4-15. PMID 16445433 Gianluca Tosini, Ian Ferguson & Kazuo Tsubota, "Effects of blue light on the circadian system and eye physiology", _Mol Vis,_ 2016;22: 61-72. PMID 26900325 Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", _PLoS One,_ 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853 Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", _Int J Ophthalmol,_ 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436 Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", _Oxid Med Cell Longev,_ 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186 Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", _Biomed Pharmacother,_ 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817 Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", _Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci,_ 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
Here are a couple of abstracts especially succinct: W T Ham Jr, "Ocular hazards of light sources: Review of current knowledge", _J Occup Med,_ 1983 Feb;25(2):101-103. PMID 6834158 Jiangmei Wu, Stefan Seregard & Peep V Algvere, "Photochemical damage of the retina", _Surv Ophthalmol,_ 2006 Sep-Oct;51(5):461-481. PMID 16950247
I gotta say if your family has cases of macular degeneration I would still use blue light Filters. but otherwise I don't see any arguments for them and I only sell them if a patient/ customer wants them. and they can enhance contrast vision so if you have problems there also good investment.
One thing to note (and this is explained in the video but most people seemed to not actually watch it, just read the thumbnail): while blue light is not harmful to your eyes, it can still affect your circadian rhythm. Blue light sends the signal to our brain that it's daytime, and that we should be more alert. Setting a blue light filter on your phone, computer, etc., using blue light filtering glasses, or simply limiting nighttime screen use can all be beneficial to your sleep, and thus to your health.
I don't think this is scientifically proven either. I saw studies that didn't find correlation between blue light and sleep. What did seem to have a correlation is how engaged you are when you're using your phone/computer before bed. For example if you're reading a very exciting book before bed it doesn't matter if it's on a phone screen with blue light or on a piece of paper - you're going to have trouble falling asleep. I don't have a link, but I found it by just googling.
If the original study about blue light damaging your eyes was done with cervical cancer cells, does that mean blue light could potentially treat cervical cancer? If so I think that could be really cool.
It's proably inferior to the current cancer treatment options out there. From what I gather what they mean is that blue light can kill ALL cells if they're not protected by those specific pigments in our eyes. This is basically what the current radiation/x-ray therapy methods already do, but at a higher efficiency.
The problem with that is that visible blue light can't really penetrate our skin and get to the cancer. If it could, you'd be able to see your screen through your hand. That's why we use other types of radiation that can actually penetrate the body and attack the cancer cells
When I 1st started wearing contacts I wore gas-permiable contacts. My sophomore year I got poked in the eye and felt the lense go behind my eyelid. I went to 2 different ophthalmologists and could not find anything even though I could feel something there for 2 years. 12 years later I went for a routine ophthalmologists visit and when examining my eye lid. I blinked and my contact lens popped out with a whole bunch of skin cells growing on top and below it.
I think people think the only reason blue light is damaging is because it can so-called "cause eye deterioration". Yes and no. Blue light doesn't directly affect your eyes, but because your eyes don't really close when you're playing a game or concentrating on a video, it can cause eye strain and dryness, which then those symptoms lead to blurriness.
I think i have this case. Usually i play games straight 9 hours if i'm not busy at school or even 12 hours straight. Now my eyes is soooo blurry😢. Do you guys thing LASIK will help my eyes?😢
Actually, blue light irradiation of lipofuscin results in the production of free radicals. Retinal cells accumulate lipofuscin over time, which is why blue light is especially hazardous to older individuals, but not so much to younger individuals.
I had LASIK and after 10 years my eyesight was so near-sighted I had to get glasses again. Yet my mother-in-law and husband had LASIK before me, it's been about 20 years since their surgeries, and they can still see perfectly. So you never know how it'll go.
@@neo-filthyfrank1347 also you're wrong anyways because every source is telling me that LASIK uses special cutting lasers to change the shape of your cornea, which is basically boring small holes into them. which is not able to be fixed, as your eyes are well, your eyes. Maybe you should do some research.
Hey guys. Orthoptist here. As always I was scared that this is once again a video that spreads bullshit but thank God I can say that all of this is very true and both of the docs really know what they are talking about. Thanks for the video
Not just in eyes, but in skin and hair too. Pigment takes a little bit to come in. I hear a lot of silly stories from first time parents thinking that a child isn't theirs because the pigment hasn't come in. I'm half native, half white. Everyone in my family was born blonde and blue eyed like my mother and then half of us kids had our eyes and skin darken, and all of us had our hair darken to varying shades of brown and black like my father. My mother's eyes also changed from blue to green when she was 43 while undergoing chemotherapy. They've been green ever since. Not sure why that is.
You mother had or has yellow skin or something? Because if she has a condition that affects liver and the skin became little yellow that can be a thing, because yellow with blue give you green right ? I don't know just talking, don't know how silly i am right now in this commentary but... or she eats lots of carrot? Rs that's turn your skin yellow too
I can understand the "glasses makes your vision worse" one. One thing I've noticed that people don't think about is that when you take off your glasses, your vision IS worse than usual for a short time. Just like with light level adjustments it takes a little time for your eyes to adjust to not having the glasses again. After a few minutes you'll notice your glasses-less vision is just as good (or lets be real, probably as bad) as usual.
It is the stupidest thing but I often find myself becoming a little frustrated when it's shower time because it means removing my glasses and now I can't see very well 😂. If I'm in bed on my phone, I don't mind not wearing them but once I leave my room, or I'm up moving around, I really need them. I wonder if people who have contacts wear them in the shower as well or would that cause steam on the lenses...
@@BewareTheLilyOfTheValley it doesn't cause steam on lenses but lenses don't really like water, so if any gets in, it makes them less flexible and makes you feel like you have super dry eyes. I did shower with them a few times mostly by forgetting I have them on but then I read about scary bacteria that can stay in your eye under the lenses and now I religiously take them out even when swimming in a pool 😅
Love this ❤️. I especially liked that you spoke about blue light glasses. While we advise patients to get them, it’s unethical to threaten them with vision loss if they don’t use them.
So true and I hate when professionals do that. I've never and will never tell px they will lose vision when recommending blue light specs, it feels unethical.
Thank you for mentioning the blue light myth! I constantly get asked about buying blue-light blocking for my glasses, and I always say no, although for a different reason than most people. I have narcolepsy, a disorder that severs the connection between my circadian rhythm and the rest of my brain and causes neurotransmitter imbalances as a result. In a healthy brain, a neurotransmitter called orexin directs when other wakefulness promoting neurotransmitters are released. As just one example, dopamine levels spike in the morning, giving you the urge to get out of bed. My orexin-producing neutrons are mostly or completely gone as of an autoimmune attack that happened when I was 14. With no orexin to direct the brain, dopamine, norepinephrine, histamine, serotonin, GABA, and other important neurotransmitters don't get released in the normal organized way. In the same way that a diabetic has to do the job of their pancreas, I have to do the same for my hypothalamus through medications and lifestyle changes. Blue light promotes wakefulness, so I use it during the day to remind my brain that it's wakefulness time. At night, my lights switch to yellow, which helps my brain settle down for sleep. It’s not a life-changing strategy by any means, and I definitely need several medications as well, but it does help!
Interesting! I have narcolepsy too. Unfortunately, blue light doesn't do a good job at keeping me awake. I know this because i tried gaming during the pandemic but i wasn't taking enough medication at the time and i couldn't even do it for 10 minutes (which resulted in losing an hour of trying to stay awake). Games on the smartphone are even worse. It think it is more exhausting because the screen is smaller.
@@sarahvandekerkhof1458 That’s fair! Even among narcoleptics, the strategies and medications that work for one person may not work for another. I should clarify that I can’t just use blue light on my phone, I have to use certain light bulbs in floor lamps to get the best effect. I have a color-changing smart bulb in my floor lamp, and I use a combo of routines on the Cync and Google Home apps to control it throughout the day. I also have a regular 60-watt equivalent LED daylight light bulb in my desk lamp lamp, since I don’t need that one to turn on/off or switch colors on it’s own. Blue light from my phone doesn’t help much with wakefulness during the day, but I definitely need the night shift filter at night to help combat that wonderful narcolepsy insomnia 🙃 I always ended up playing ACNH until 4 AM when I was home at the beginning of the pandemic lol
It is not a myth. These doctors didn't give full information. There's an actual research done on it and it's been discussed via neuroscientists like Andrew Huberman.
I have convergence insufficiency and once a week I had to do some really cool 3D exercises as a kid. The ophthalmologist put red/blue glasses on me and I had to try to align some figures at different depths.
I actually had more than one cases where one of my contact lenses was folded and hiding probably where the top of my eyeball is, so not really at the far back. I felt it being loose and when blinking I lost it, assuming it had fallen somewhere in my bathroom. The first time that occurred, I thought nothing of it and just replaced it. I didn’t realize until the next day when I woke up with an irritated eye that there was something in there. Had to lift my upper eyelid, look down and do a massaging move to bring down whatever was up there. It was folded in half and tucked in there, and I could feel nothing except a very mild irritation. The following times a similar contact “loss” happened I knew exactly where to check and it was kind of a non-issue since then. Recently I had Lasik and glad I don’t have to stick anything in my eyes for the rest of my life (hopefully)
Blue light? I was checked in school and again at 18 years old during regular checkups and passed with normal color vision. After being around welding for a dozen years I failed the color vision section of my examination. A 21 picture battery and I missed all 7 blue cards. I work in aluminum ships etc with very reflective mirror-like walls. Even in another room facing away from the welding we get significant blue light. The doctor giving the exam told me I was lying about passing previously because (in his words) color vision doesn't change. He didn't care to check my record. I mention these results to all my eye doctors over the years (I am now 62) and get mixed results including "Hmm" and "I did not know that". More than one has stated: Without a doubt, the intense blue light from welding has lowered the sensitivity of my blue cones. Many welders over the years have been blinded by the light radiation. While UV is blamed for burns and blisters on the eyes, welding light contains intense visible (red green and blue) light, ultraviolet, and infrared radiation. I think it's time to update your myths. At least include exceptions and qualifiers in your language.
any intense electromagnetic radiation, blue or not will be damaging to the eyes. This is nothing specific about blue light. Not even comparable to blue light in our screens - it's like comparing a pottasium isotope in a banana to a chuck of uranium lmao.
@@ambatuBUHSURK Sooooo, my objection is to the "MYTH" that blue light hurts your eyes. You seem to agree that it can. I can no longer see blue as well as I should. Numerous jobs (like a pilot) require perfect color vision. My eyes are permanently damaged. GFY with that banana lmao.
I have convergence insufficiency and I did vision therapy for about a year. It definitely improved my vision. However, I do need glasses because my eyes get strained very easily. The glasses just help my eyes relax and give them a break from focusing so hard.
Have a history of glaucoma in the family and my pressures were elevated. Dr. gave me drops to rule out that issue and only used on one eye. Pressure dropped but not enough to warrant continuation. Turns out that my cornea is thicker than usual (my brother has the same) so the Dr. took me off the drops. If I recall correctly, those drops may cause eyelashes to grow more but also, over time, could have made my blue eyes become darker - which isn't a bad thing, just not a desired outcome as I and others rather fancy their color.
The drops that make your eye lashes grow are prostaglandins so the drugs such as bimatoprost, latanoprost, travoprost and tafluprost. Usually they are used in both eyes since they can darken the iris. The iris is less likely to change in colour if your eyes are fully blue with no specs if green and brown. There are no changes in colour once you stop using the drug however.
Unfortunately, you could only expose the outer layer of the tumor, and not even all of that layer. Also, the intensity of light required would generate heat and could also damage adjoining tissues. Yes, light/laser is an available tool, but if the tumor is that readily accessible, it could be removed more completely and easily by freezing - such as a wart.
E Zrenner, "[Light-induced damage to the eye]", Fortschr Ophthalmol, 1990;87 Suppl:S41-51. PMID 2083911 Peep V Algvere, John Marshall, Stefan Seregard, "Age-related maculopathy and the impact of blue light hazard", Acta Ophthalmol Scand, 2006 Feb;84(1):4-15. PMID 16445433 Gianluca Tosini, Ian Ferguson & Kazuo Tsubota, "Effects of blue light on the circadian system and eye physiology", Mol Vis, 2016;22: 61-72. PMID 26900325 Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", PLoS One, 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853 Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", Int J Ophthalmol, 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436 Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", Oxid Med Cell Longev, 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186 Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", Biomed Pharmacother, 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817 Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
I've been wearing contact lenses since 1986, I've never had an eye infection in all those years, never had a problem wearing them, can put them in and out without a mirror, I hate glasses. My husband is 86 and has 20/20 vision but has glaucoma, had one cataract done but can't have other one done due to damage from glaucoma. Thanks for this girls!
Have a well earned thumbs up! The point this became clear was when you didn't just talk about how blue light doesn't hurt your eyes, but does have other effects (e.g. difficulty sleeping).
As a truck driver I rarely wore Sun glasses. Because it's easier to just deal with the glare then cleaning my sunglasses. I think this will change after seeing this video. Also I'm way overdue to see an optometrist. Thank you.
I wear contact lenses, and sometimes when they get dry and I rub my eyes they may get folded and get stuck usually on top of my eyes. It takes a little bit of effort to get them out, but you can definitely feel like there’s something stuck there, so I don’t know how that woman didn’t notice it to the point she had 4 lenses stuck in her eyes.
For me, whenever I got one too stuck in my eye, I would just put in a new one and close my eye and the old one would crash into it, causing it to come to the front so I can take it out, so I am confused how someone could get 4 stuck also.
As a beginner, Once I was taking out my my right eye contact lense as I got hold of it in my eyes I felt like it just dropped of my fingers in the bathroom, after searching it for minutes, my eyes were bot comfortable and tears would come and I was feeling like there's something stuck in my eyes, I was convinced that the lense might've fallen down and my eyes is itching due any bacteria or something, after 1hour of itch and sorrow, I once again looked the back of my eyes in the mirror and finally realised that it was stuck in my eyes.
Eye exercises do not affect the underlying condition, but they can be used to teach a patient how to work with what they have as well as teaching / strengthening the eye muscles which helps with conditions like strabismus or nystagmus
@@SmallSpoonBrigade There weren't so many video games when I was growing up. And my father was against technology (despite the fact that he was an engineer). We had no radio, no TV, no microwave. We did have a ball attached to a string hanging from the ceiling. My mom would swing it in various patterns and I wore a patch and followed it with my bad eye.
@@PotatoPieYT Yeah, I do think the patch helped. My eyes don't work together and my bad eye cannot see 20/20 even with glasses. But my friend who never wore a patch can only see light and dark with her bad eye. Maybe her eye is just worse to begin with though.
Thank you for the part about blue light. I've been worried for a while now that, even though I have the blue light filter on my phone screen and a slight blue blocker in my glasses, my eyes were being damaged and it would be a problem later on. So thank you for easing my mind!
E Zrenner, "[Light-induced damage to the eye]", Fortschr Ophthalmol, 1990;87 Suppl:S41-51. PMID 2083911 Peep V Algvere, John Marshall, Stefan Seregard, "Age-related maculopathy and the impact of blue light hazard", Acta Ophthalmol Scand, 2006 Feb;84(1):4-15. PMID 16445433 Gianluca Tosini, Ian Ferguson & Kazuo Tsubota, "Effects of blue light on the circadian system and eye physiology", Mol Vis, 2016;22: 61-72. PMID 26900325 Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", PLoS One, 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853 Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", Int J Ophthalmol, 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436 Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", Oxid Med Cell Longev, 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186 Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", Biomed Pharmacother, 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817 Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
Through a large portion of my 20's I had an issue where if I didn't go outside and do routine cardio (running/walking) my eyesight would be noticeably blurry at most ranges. Going out for around 30 minutes or more and looking at things at various ranges (from the very near to the very far like distant mountains) tended to result in my vision becoming clear again. Later I started taking a specific multivitamin that also contains some "superfood" concentrates and minerals. For whatever reason I've basically preferred to be housebound for the last 3 years (starting a few months before the whole covid thing), rarely going outside, but when I have to (to put out garbage and recycling) I've noticed that instead of my vision being very blurry like it used to be, it is clear at all ranges. I suspect it had a lot to do with me being chronically malnourished when it comes to certain things in those multivitamins, but otherwise well fed. Edit: Thought I should elaborate on a couple things. Specifically it was after a few days of not going outside that my vision would worsen. The multivitamin is a one a day kind, and not very expensive.
@@teopeiramatikos Look for "webber naturals most complete multi". They've 4 options, Men, Women and the other two are the same for those 50+ years old. I do supplement with other things. I had the eye benefits long before taking them but at some point I added a multi-B because I thought I might be a bit low in them. I also take vitamin-C crystals mixed with fruit juice since I think it might benefit the gums to come into direct contact with it (instead of swallowed inside a pill bypassing the gums), C-rich fruits are probably best though. Omega-3 as well, I believe Omega-6 is easy to get in the diet and the human body can manufacture enough Omega-9. I take vitamin-D drops as well since I don't get enough sun daily.
Right, the thing about not being able to fix your eyesight is complete bs. For some kinds of shortsightedness at least. I am basically the same case as you, I started doing some exercises, like shifting focus from near to far and alike, multiple times a day. I can see my eyesight improving every few days.
@@bgdgdgdf4488 I play apex legends at the top level, competing with pro players even. If I don't do eye execs for a few months, I'll perform like trASSh. But a few days of eye exercises? back to 20/20. I even have a chart printed out to test it. You download them and use a measuring tape to space out where to stand and then boom, goodbye to optometry's "degree holding" salesmen.
Another tip= if you feel like something in is your eye and nothing comes out, your eye most likely got scratched which can be helped if you go to an optometrist or you can deal with the pain and it should heal
You can buy sterile saline (salt water)eye drops over the counter at pharmacy's. If your eyes feel gritty and painful, like there is something in them,but they aren't red ,simply flushing them out with these will probably put them right. If you still have a problem after a couple of days,and having used the drops as instructed by the pharmacist,you should see a doctor. You might have an eye infection and need antibiotic drops/ointment
Damage to the epithelial cells from the cornea also called corneal staining heals very quickly so just don't rub your eyes and it should heal in 24 hours. When the damage is deeper it can take a bit longer to heal. But if the damage is so deep that it penetrates the stromal layer then you will probably end up with corneal scarring
I used to look at a screen for hours it got my eyes dry and the far away things seemed blurry. But then I started going out more with friends and living a more healthier life. It somehow solved that issue and then i was able to look at far away things easily
Late to the party, but that's simply due to not blinking enough when watching screens. We normally blink between 20-30 times per minute, but when in front of a screen that amount decreases to about 1-2 times/min. That has a crucial effect on the dryness of your eyes, especially if those minutes add up to several hours.
Some of these myths are spread by professionals though...easier targets are the blue light, which gets them a return cause a "blue light filter" option when we get new glass lens are paid with a premium price and one and the eye exercise to improve the lens and the muscles around it are everywhere on youtube, spread by actual eye doctors.
@@kurok1tenshi the blue light journal cited in the video is dated 2018 so im not surprised if there's still some professionals out there spreading myth abt it since it's relatively new (
They;re not professionals at all. E Zrenner, "[Light-induced damage to the eye]", Fortschr Ophthalmol, 1990;87 Suppl:S41-51. PMID 2083911 Peep V Algvere, John Marshall, Stefan Seregard, "Age-related maculopathy and the impact of blue light hazard", Acta Ophthalmol Scand, 2006 Feb;84(1):4-15. PMID 16445433 Gianluca Tosini, Ian Ferguson & Kazuo Tsubota, "Effects of blue light on the circadian system and eye physiology", Mol Vis, 2016;22: 61-72. PMID 26900325 Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", PLoS One, 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853 Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", Int J Ophthalmol, 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436 Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", Oxid Med Cell Longev, 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186 Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", Biomed Pharmacother, 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817 Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
@@MrAwesomeSquad What are you even talking about? One of them is a medical doctor that specialises in eyes and the other one is a licensed eye doctor. It's literally in the name! The optometrist is a licensed doctor and completed a doctorate degree in optometry plus clinical training. The only difference is that one has an MD and the other one doesn't. She is a doctor, maybe not a medical doctor but still a doctor. Therefore, they are both eye doctors so the OP is correct. Only one of them can perform medical and surgical operations but they both treat eyes. I don't know which Walmart hires optometrists as staff and pays them as much as an optometrist earns. You may be confusing her with an optician (also not found in Walmarts either) because I hope you're not dumb enough to devalue this woman's hard work just because she doesn't have an MD and the other one does.
6:12 "eye exercises" are also used for improving accommodation. Some people have isues with that so there are exercises that help the brain to relearn how to accommodate the lens.
I cured my lazy eye with eye exercises! At 21 years old as well… I was wearing eye patches and glasses since I was 4. Sometimes when I am tired I wear contact lenses. If I wear them too long I notice my eyes are weaker and turn in again. I then do a few eye exercises and the eye stops turning in. I was really determined though haha
@@Daniel-ng2ru Vision is pretty much the same. I never had an issue seeing.. but the light felt too strong and couldn’t control it before. I Initially I was 4.5+ and went back and now 2.0+ after I fixed it.
@@preetibla like 10 around the world clockwise and anti clockwise, up down up down x 10 side side, diagonal etc. give it a go! Maybe it will correct for 1 minute… keep trying and the eye will be stronger
As a practicing Optometrist and Lecturer I can confirm all these facts and discussions are true. I wish all my patients would watch your video before asking the usual "silly"/misguided questions!
Simon, I thought that children DO see worse wearing glasses hence, Ortho-K, multifocus lenses, atropine, to slow myopia progression. Whereas, if kids do nothing except get more powerful glasses over time - their myopia will worsen?
@@Allan-et5ig Actually two interesting seperate issues/theories. It has been shown that wearing the correct myopic prescription tends to stop the eye progressively getting worse (longer) COMPARED TO under prescribing/not wearing spectacles. Myopia will progress anyway through teenage years as the eye naturally grows depending on hertitage/genetics. Myopia management as you mention correctly is a "new" way of considering how to stem the axial growth of the eye by tricking it by blurring the peripheral vision. This can be achieved with special spectacle lenses or contacts such as the Coopervision MiSight lens. Atropine in a very low dose can reduce the power of the focusing system (accommodation) which again is thought to be a factor in myopic progression (actually perhaps the most effective method of slowing down the progression of myopia) OrthoK is a method of correction of the vision, but without the peripheral challenges of spectacles - again some evidence to show this works well. So... In summary... A massive topic area. Spectacles do not cause a prescription to get worse - infact it protects against some myopia progression (no effect whatsoever on hyperopia (very slight only) or astigmatism).
@@Dorlinedainwen oh trust me I do. But with a limited time in a clinic (20mins per patient here where I am) it limits time between extensive questions and answers and then patient care of looking for eye disease. Hense why this excellent video would explain several of the most common myths asked every day.
@@MrSRMatthews How do they test whether glasses make vision worse? Also what about the other question that I feel makes more sense rather than asking if they make vision worse: Do glasses prevent/lock out your vision from improving? Glasses help vision but I feel our eyes would adapt to having glasses somewhat.
When I have lost a contact into the top or side of the eye, I have been able to move it forward by gently rubbing the top of my closed eye. The lens is usually folded, but I can then extract it. Adding blue light filters to my glasses was a game changer once I had to use my computer more for telehealth with my clients. I wish you had discussed monovision with contacts & about bifocal contacts.
If I was gaming for long periods (multiple hours a day) for a few days I'd inevitably end up with significant eye strain/fatigue. Yellow lens "driving" glasses completely alleviated the issue. The fact of the matter is, blue light has a shorter wavelength and higher energy than most of what we see and our eyes just don't filter it as well as colors toward the yellow/red end of the visible spectrum. UV is more dangerous than IR precisely due to it's shorter wavelength and higher energy, so it seems obvious blue light would be "worse" than most of the rest.
The one on the right (camera POV) was really good at getting the general point across, and the one on the left, was really good at getting the more technical and in depth stuff. Overall really great pair of Optometrists :)
Optometrist and opthalmologist* sorry lol, I know someone on their way to become an opthalmologist and he's very picky about the difference, basically opthalmologist's are full on doctors and specialize in the eyes, while optometrist can't do as much I guess? Pediatrist are in the same category as optometrist apparently, where they can't do as much stuff as other doctors. Keep in mind this is all second hand information, so I could be wrong about my explanations! Both careers are highly respectable!
@@alyssaurus17 Both are doctors, but think of ophthalmologists as the specialist performing eye surgeries/procedures, and the optometrist as your primary eye care provider that can diagnose/manage ocular conditions that do not involve major surgeries/procedures :) (I am an optometrist in the US)
@@ahhhhitsteresa where I am from (HK) optometrists study a different 4-year degree while ophthalmologists study a 6 year medical degree plus 6-7 years of specialty training- I guess they’re different everywhere?
Blue light, whether from the sun or a laptop, is very effective at inhibiting melatonin production - thus reducing both the quantity and quality of your sleep - I have found I fall asleep easier when wearing a blue light filter
I was hoping they would cover this completely about blue light: If it was really true that blue light was damaging to the eyes, we would have a blindness pandemic. But not bcoz of our digital devices but because of the sunlight itself. Sunlight has much more blue light than any of your devices. Now, the only factor where blue light affects your body is after sun down. Our bodies are such that we don't expect blue light after sun set. So if you keep feeding your eyes blue light after dark, then your body will think it is still day and your sleep cycle will get messed. That being said, turning on the night mode found on all the devices nowadays is enough. You don't need blue light filter glasses.
That's a good point. While blue light is very likely to cause retinal damage in older individuals (due to lipofuscin accumulation) digital devices are not going to be the primary source of exposure. Rather, all sources of bright light can (and will) cause this form of damage. Not just sunlight, but molecules in the sky also scatter both blue and UV radiation very efficiently (via Rayleigh scattering) meaning that simply looking up at the sky without orange-ish sunglasses can be more harmful than looking at a digital screen in a dark room (which, of course, is also potentially harmful for older individuals with more lipofuscin). That's probably the reason why we haven't seen significantly increased rates of age-associated macular degeneration in the digital age―after all, more screen time presumably means less time spent outdoors.
@@Acetyl53 yes. Intensity of the sun is much much higher. That's why blue light from screens is not at all harmful during the day. And at night you can turn on night mode on the device. No need for any special glasses.
I love this episode because it offers BOTH an Opthalmologist (MD) and an Optometrist (OD), both doctors but work usually in different settings. Very cool info and debunking thank you.
@@mannygold5367 the top is the test chart distance in feet. ie 20 feet ( or 6 metre) The bottom number is the line of letters on that chart where the strokes and gaps of the letter subtend 1 minute of arc. 1 minute of arc is taken to be the "normal" resolution limit of the human eye. "normal" means what around 66% of people achieve.
Can definitely agree that blue light does not damage the eyes. I'm in front of a computer screen, on average, maybe 80 hours a week or so for YEARS and my vision hasn't gotten any worse. I don't wear glasses and my vision is still considered to be "exceptional."
Blue light cause issue over a very long time and will raise the risks of early cataract and AMD. So while it have no immediate effect like a lot of people say, it is nocive. (And the sun produce a more turquoise kind of light that is beneficial and it' s different than the purpleish blue light from screens and led)
@@SheinelI Over a "very long time." Well, I've spent the last couple decades staring at screens several hours a day, everyday. I work in the tech industry and have also known people who have been in this business much longer than I have, 30+ years older than I am, who still have amazing vision while there are others I've known who never spend time in front of screens that have suffered vision loss and/or cataracts before they even hit their teenage years.
Both my parents had blue eyes and I was brown eyed until I was an adult. My eyes are now olive green/hazel with touches of blue about the iris. I also was born with nystagmus. I was told that even though nystagmus creates vision issues, it is actually a neurological problem.
As a person with red-green colour deficiency, I can say that my biggest two issues in life are public bathrooms and diode lamps on electronics. If I am visiting a bathroom which uses a green "vacant" symbol or red "occupied" symbol that has only colour and no text, I can't really be sure if it actually is green or red, so I have to check the stall door to know, automatically turning me into "that guy". I also can't easily know if electronic diodes show green, yellow, or red most of the time, which can be annoying considering I work in IT and often have to work with switches, routers, and other gadgets that use diodes with changing colours to inform the user of status. Society, start using blue vs red instead of green vs red please!
I have myopia. After doing eye exercises for a year straight, then getting tested again I was told my eye sight improved a fair bit and I have noticed it too. I wouldn’t skip out on eye exercises.
Yup they do actually work. These women should be fired E Zrenner, "[Light-induced damage to the eye]", Fortschr Ophthalmol, 1990;87 Suppl:S41-51. PMID 2083911 Peep V Algvere, John Marshall, Stefan Seregard, "Age-related maculopathy and the impact of blue light hazard", Acta Ophthalmol Scand, 2006 Feb;84(1):4-15. PMID 16445433 Gianluca Tosini, Ian Ferguson & Kazuo Tsubota, "Effects of blue light on the circadian system and eye physiology", Mol Vis, 2016;22: 61-72. PMID 26900325 Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", PLoS One, 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853 Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", Int J Ophthalmol, 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436 Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", Oxid Med Cell Longev, 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186 Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", Biomed Pharmacother, 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817 Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
Please dont do any so called "eye exercises" from William Bates. It will not be beneficial to your underlying problem if there is any. Seek an optometrist for a consulting and an examination.
I had a friend in her '50s with a pretty strong prescription. She did one of those "quack" programs with eye exercises. I totally thought it was silly but she was extremely diligent. I came back to visit her a year later and her prescription was much lighter. I visited a couple of years after that and she only needed glasses for very close stuff. A year later, she didn't need glasses at all--she could both read small print up close and see clearly far away and her astigmatism was gone. I think doctors can't find scientific evidence for eye exercises working because they can't find enough people that are diligent over those timescales. But I totally saw it happen. It's not a myth. I don't know how many people can do 15 or 20 mintues every day for years, though.
.... The myth is that the eye is being restored. Whats happening is you've exercised the muscles that focus the lens in your eye. Reliance on that can cause eye strain that eye strain can be debilitating over time. However, sometimes people just get lazy eye muscles and they don't focus normally. I know, because I suffered through the eye strain.
Anecdotally, eye exercises worked for me too. I've been using Mark Warren's exercises where the idea is to train the muscles that control the lenses in order to relax, since phones and screens make them contract too often. Another thing that might be useful, especially for people with dry eye like me is to use artificial tears. I used to have difficutly with visual clarity even when my diopters have decreased. It wasn't until medical check up that I found out my eyes were very dry. I've been using it recently and it has become near 20/20 vision, straight from -3. I hope I can improve my vision further
@@obnoxiouscommenter6194 how gradual was the improvement. I have been thinking about my eyesight and if I can improve them naturally, I am willing to try it out
@@tanirikamajumder4512 it'll take months, dropped from -1.5 to about -0.5. Even though the eye focus is much better, I'm still working on my poor visual acuity. I've heard it's more of training the brain to recognize edges
My vision also improved from -2.75 to -1.00 ... it's been 3 years of being 100% dedicated to trying to be positive, not stress etc. So yes, eyesight can improve but it requires a lot of mental focus and most people lack the discipline and energy. I also don't have diabetes anymore even though my doctor said it's incurable..
There is not only one diagnosis that eye exercises can help with - just one diagnosis that insurance companies pay for treatment of. Eye exercises can help both convergence insufficiency and convergence excess, as well as a host of other conditions. It was sad to see the OD sit silent during this section as she did a rotation on visual therapy in optometry school. The MD or DO ophthalmologist likely has never had any training in how visual therapy can help restore function to many individuals. They did hit the main target of letting folks know you cannot exercise away an Rx for glasses beyond + or - 0.50!
Interesting stuff. I'm absolutely blind without my glasses. It doesn't seem like my vision is "blurry" without my glasses (I have astigmatism), but imagine you take a photo [with text] into photoshop, duplicate the layer and set it transparency slightly below the original layer, and move the duplicated layer down about 2 millimeters. Repeat the process two more times with a variation in positioning of the layer (double vision in both eyes). If I focus my looking through both my eyes just right, without my glasses, I can see four lines of the same line of text lmao.
The big story I heard since I was young was this: your eyes do not get better, they only get worse. If you're wearing glasses, you may need stronger lenses over the years, but NEVER will you need less correction. Once you start wearing glasses (that you really need), you'll always need glasses or other corrective lenses. This is why cataracts were the best thing that ever happened to me. Before, broken glasses meant expense and a long wait before you could function again (unless you carried spares with you all the time, usually impractical). Then I had cataract surgery with the corrective (toric) implants. Now I go buy a pair of reading glasses for a few dollars and don't even need glasses to drive. If you ever have cataracts (and I hope you don't), opt for the more expensive corrective implants; it's the best money you'll ever spend. Not to mention that you'll be able to wear non-prescription sunglasses (prescription sunglasses are a pain in the ass unless you carry a purse).
Vision can and does get better for a few reasons that I can think of. Young children are often naturally far-sighted because the eye isn't done growing yet and its axial length is shorter than where it will be by the time they are adults. So they may end up needing glasses with a plus Rx, and then with age, as the eye lengthens, the amount of Rx needed to focus the light properly on their retina becomes less and less. A counterintuitive case of vision getting "better" is when people experience the first onset of cataracts, where vision is affected but can still be corrected adequately by glasses. Adding plus power to the person's Rx may bring them to 20/20. So if you have a nearsighted individual who's always rocked a heavy minus Rx, the case could be made that their vision "got better" when they leave the office with a less minus Rx than before. In fact, when older patients remark that "actually, my vision seems to have gotten better somehow!" you can pretty well guess cataracts early in their development are responsible for this temporary bout of perceived good fortune. But the core of your sentiment is definitely true: there is no "magic" to vision or the eyes. If and when there are improvements (or more typically, degradation), there is a clear reason for it.
@@gaynzz6841 For starters, the entire medical community disagrees with you on that point. Myopia, hyperopia, astigmatism, and all permutations of such, have diagnostic codes just like, say, heart or gastrointestinal diseases. States vary on the specifics, but in general, at least in the US, it is illegal to sell somebody prescription vision correction without a valid Rx for it. In my state, vision Rx's are valid for, at most, 2 years. And if these facts aren't enough, try going into your nearest DMV with worse-than-20/40 vision and see if they'll let you leave with an unrestricted driver's license. Not only does the medical community agree that common vision deficiencies are actual bona fide medical conditions, but this fact is also reflected in various systems and institutions that we deal with in our daily lives.
Blue light gives me headaches when reading for prolonged periods of time. Before iOS added the feature to the native OS I used to get headaches all the time while reading on my iPad, even at very low brightness and even when changing the background of the 'paper' to grey or brownish/yellowish/beige, which was certainly more comfortable to my eyes than white, but it still hurt. When they added the night vision feature it felt sooo much better. I felt like pressure was relieved from my eyes, literally. I could read for hours without pain. I know they don't completely block blue light but just reducing it helps a lot.
E Zrenner, "[Light-induced damage to the eye]", Fortschr Ophthalmol, 1990;87 Suppl:S41-51. PMID 2083911 Peep V Algvere, John Marshall, Stefan Seregard, "Age-related maculopathy and the impact of blue light hazard", Acta Ophthalmol Scand, 2006 Feb;84(1):4-15. PMID 16445433 Gianluca Tosini, Ian Ferguson & Kazuo Tsubota, "Effects of blue light on the circadian system and eye physiology", Mol Vis, 2016;22: 61-72. PMID 26900325 Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", PLoS One, 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853 Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", Int J Ophthalmol, 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436 Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", Oxid Med Cell Longev, 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186 Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", Biomed Pharmacother, 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817 Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
I have chronic migraines and blue light is one of the triggers. For reference, migraines can have different triggers for different people - anything from coffee to sound. Blue light is indeed not dangerous to the eyes as far as we know, but of course that changes if you have a specific eye or neurological problem.
I once had styes in both eyes, so I couldn’t wear my contacts. I was also unlucky enough to have broken glasses at the time. So for a week straight I just could not see.
It was interesting to hear about the blue light. I’ve known for a while it was a myth, so I was pleasantly surprised when I went to get my eyes tested a few days ago and my optician did not recommend it. In fact, looking on their website, I don’t think they even offer it any more. They did recommend glare reduction for my lenses, which I took, but - yeah. Some interesting myths there that I’d never heard of!
My eye doctor, when I last had my eyes checked, didn't recommend blue light filtering, but did mention it as an option as I was - at the time - going to start needing two separate prescriptions for long distance and medium distance (specifically for using the computer as my job at the time had me in front of a computer 9+ hours per day, and I was spending another 3-6 hours per day in front of my computer at home) and suggested getting yellow-tinted lenses for my computer distance glasses, basically as a combination of the tinting helping with my migraines (due to the reduced brightness, and generally being less bothered by 'warmer' light temperatures, not because of any damage from the blue light) and the blue-light reduction helping with my horrible sleeping patterns. It is certainly good, though, that both eye doctors and more scrupulous opticians are not trying to further the myth that blue light is going to damage your eyes or cause eye strain, as opposed to simply causing some issues to your sleep schedule.
There are MANY conditions for which eye exercises can be beneficial. Of course, not the refractive conditions, but CI is far from the only issue out there that can be improved with Vision Therapy. BV/VT/Vision Rehab is a whole specialty in eyecare. Also, pencil push-ups are not a modern VT exercise, this is dated information.
I've always wondered about the opposite of the 'eyes get more farsighted as you get older'. I was quite farsighted as a child, but now, in my 30's, I'm relatively dependant on contact lenses for near sightedness (-3.0). Always wondered what might have caused this when everyone has always said "You'll get more farsighted as you age".
My son was diagnosed with Eyeritis at the age of 9. The diagnosis came with some pretty crappy news. The specialist eye doctor said that unfortunately there is no cure, however with steroid drops they can slow the progression and MAYBE he won't go blind in his 40's. At his last eye exam he was told that if he were to go up 1 point he would be declared legally bling. The steroid drops run $650.00 for a 0.85 bottle which lasts 7 days. He's supposed to do 1 drop daily. Without insurance it's impossible to put that kind of money out for 14 drops. Have you got any suggestion on an alternative treatment that we can speak to his eye Dr about? Desperate for help! Thank you
Not a doctor, and this is not medical advice, but while iritis is not "curable," it is certainly treatable. Acute cases can pop up and then go away forever after a course of treatment. Some people experience chronic iritis. Is this a chronic case? At the eye clinic where I work, they most often prescribe Pred Forte, which is a fairly cheap and common ophthalmic steroid drop, available in generic form. Of course, an Rx is still needed for this. The aim is to reduce inflammation and quiet the eye(s) down until the episode passes. I would talk to the doctor and tell them that the price of the medication they've prescribed is prohibitive and ask if they could please prescribe a more affordable alternative. If a steroid is all that's needed, Pred Forte should do the trick. If your child's case is chronic, my experience suggests a systemic issue possibly requiring intervention by other medical specialists, likely a Rheumatologist. It's not safe to be on steroids for very long periods of time, and other specialists are trained to properly diagnose and treat cases requiring so-called "steroid-sparing drugs" such as Methotrexate. This may be an avenue to discuss with your child's eye doctor.
Not to make light of your situation, but it’s kinda funny how an average person could hear iritis and think it would spelled “eyeritis” because it’s a condition pertaining to your eyes. It does specifically refer to the iris though. Another name is uveitis.
I had floaters all of a sudden in my right eye last January and I was so scared at first, but I was relieved when I knew that floaters are common eye problem and started to settle and live with it. After a 2 weeks the vision in my right eye became so blurry and somewhat distorted. It turns out I had Uveitis (inflammation inside the eye) according t my ophthalmologist. It hasn't fully recovered yet but it my vision became better. For someone who are experiencing discomfort in your eye/s, or in overall health in general, Please go see a doctor. They are the experts to this field and we should trust them rather than believing in myths from other people.
Fellow uveitis sufferer here! for me it's idiopathic - I've done every test under the sun and the cause is still unknown. What did help me recover though, is a gluten free diet. I have a family history of gluten intolerance that seems to present differently in each family member and I guess for me it's the eyes. Hope this helps! Hang in there! ^^
Wow... this video was very helpful and knowledgeable. Thank you Dr. Banik and Dr. Tsai for such well thought out explanations. Both of you spoke calmly, nicely, very clearly and intelligently like true doctors should.
Snakes and salesmen will always speak nicely and put alot of effort in when they have a degree allowing them to convince you to spend hundreds on eye glasses. An optometrist running to remote areas can net up to 4k in a weekend for "charity work". Let alone their daily work
I remember back in the early 1960s, people were saying that if you roll your eyes around and look up and down, or right and left, at extremes, it would exercise your eyes and reduce (or eliminate) the need for glasses. Even Jack LaLanne advocated eye exercises (the only time I really thought he was wrong about anything).
Is science insider sponsored by Microsoft and Apple? You need humans in all the planet to be exposed to 20+ years MINIMUM at least before you can say something is "safe" or inocuous. Did you people forget that doctors said SMOKING WAS SAFE????
I always were sunglasses when driving in the summertime because I am light sensitive and also minimise the risk of getting blinded by glare and such on the road.
on most devices there is usually a feature somewhere in the settings where you could decrease the amount of blue light. you can even choose what time of the day you want to enable it. i use it on my phone at night before i sleep.
The information about Vision Therapy is partially true, VT doesn't improve Visual Acuity. What it does is it can give relief from asthenopic symptoms (headaches, eye strain etc).. However, push up is now proven to be LESS EFFECTIVE compared to VT with Life Saver cards, Eccentric circles, Brock string and many more... On top of that Accommodation can be trained with Accommodation flippers, hart charts etc... So yeah, people DO NEED VISION THERAPY. To have a HEALTHY VISION.
Like the doctors said, It depends on what your actual condition is. You are right in that it doesn't necessarily help with acuity but more so helps with accommodation and/or a "lazy eye". You are also correct in that pencil pushups are not as effective as other newer methods...
I'm surprised you guys didn't mention how diet can affect people's vision. Near the end you did mention that inflammation can cause blurry vision, but for anybody like me who has an inflammatory condition... FYI: you can reverse your eye problems with an anti-inflammatory diet!!! I was absolutely shocked when my glasses stopped working and I went to the eye doctor assuming I needed a stronger prescription and she actually reduced my prescription! MY EYES GOT BETTER 👏
That's because it can't in healthy people. Unless you have Behcets or any actual inflammatory condition (arthritis, spondylitis, etc...) Then yes, your vision can, stop getting worse. But eyes do not regenerate like that... Also, bad diets in diabetes cause blindness too but you gotta be unhealthy for diet to affect you like that, even greatly obese are not affected with trash diets
@@abigray8585 well it definitely worked on me and according to my eye doctor and anti-inflammatory diet can 100% reverse and inflammatory eye condition. And then I came home and I googled it and I did see many references to it on the internet.
Okay maybe Bluelight isn't damaging but they should really add another point that you shouldn't use phone/bluelight gadget in the dark. This really causes eye strain and dryness. It causes the eye muscles to be be stuck in the "near vision" state which causes Myopia. While addressing such myths, it's very important to give the complete information because people may think that bluelight isn't damaging and start using phones while in bed, working on computers in the dark, etc. These things really damage out eyesight and it is a very important point to be covered here.
100% exactly what happened to me. Because of what this video said about bluelight I started looking at my phone in bed in the dark for 1 hour nightly until I started experiencing constant eye pain even seeing light flashes every day & night. Eyes blurry & burning daily that I regretted it deeply.
Smoothest voice to learn from. And it’s so easy to believe you guys because there wasn’t any pauses, no “uhm” or “You know”. A lot of confidence in what you guys are teaching us. Go girls!
Not questiong their competence, but the lack of "uhms" etc. is thanks to the video editor. There's constant video cuts/punch ins (1-4 seconds) and if you know what to listen for you can hear an even higher rate of sound cuts, where they've tightened it up.
On the topic of blue light filters, there is an extremely small amount of people who will literally get severe headaches from using them. Yes, USING blue light filters can give you more headaches than not using them. I know this because I am one of them, and I've been googling about this for over 4 years and did not find anything until only a year ago where the first mention of this was a reddit thread where like a handful of people said they have the same issue. So if youve noticed youve started getting weird headaches, try turning off your blue light filter and wait for a few days to see if they disappear.
Blue light is stimulating, that's what the dimmer on your phone is for. Morning light is blue, it wakes you up, and in the evening, it's red, getting you relaxed for sleep.
I had an eye surgery recently and feel a mayor recession on my left eye. I feel it unstable, I thought the fatigue from looking into screens with close range vision and blue light ruined my surgery (hearing the second didnt relieves me a bit). I'm going to have a consultation soon. But I would like to hear an optometrist here too.
Along with the eye color thing, we've been led partially astray by Mendelian genetics. The real story is more complex and apparently Mendel just didn't include samples that were contradictory to his theory
My eye doctor did try to have me do exercises, but not for the eye, but to try and get the muscles behind it in line. After a while they said that it wouldnt work and I got my eye muscles surgically corrected.
I’ve had a long journey of eye issues with my left eye. Specifically when I was 5 I had surgery to help improve my muscles in my left eye because they were weak. I was born with something called strabismus. I did eye exercises for a while to improve the muscles, and I wore glasses for like 12 years and felt like my vision was perfect around 9th grade. Then a year or two ago I start noticing lots of strain and now my left eye is very blurry. It’s odd, because I went to two ophthalmologists and they both basically said there is no solution, and that glasses will kind of help but my left eye will always see things this way. I hate that I went through all of that just to get to this point where I’m wearing glasses that help just a bit, but it’s not clear at all in my left eye. It’s disappointing to say the least. It could be worse but I find it very hard to believe that there are people who have severe astigmatisms in both eyes and wear glasses to see clearly but I can’t see clearly out of my left eye with any prescriptions.
@@kymberlidyer7282 the ophthalmologist I went to said that eye exercises wouldn’t help for me, but I have trouble believing that to be true. Maybe I’ll do that and see how it goes
Here's some base ideology I follow when it comes to my eyesight. I don't know if you do or don't do any of these, but I'm an FPS veteran who competes at the highest levels and needs eyesight. When my eyesights blurry, I do a few things. First is hydration, I want to make sure my cells have enough water to retain flexibility. Secondly, eye exercises, which you said you tried. Third, I think substances like sugar can cause "stickyness" or other issues within the eye (I'm not a doctor, I just know that diabetes can affect the eye and this is the best explanation I can think of) so I avoid sugar largely and then it helps too.
I’ve also heard that most people will eventually experience Glaucoma in their elder years due to how it’s also a condition that very commonly occurs with old age.
@@vwupr Pretty much I remember a government road safety PSA campaign from a few years ago that was focused on that problem! It’s still possible it might be not the most accurate if further scientific developments on the topic have been made since the campaign was first released.
You are probably mixing up glaucoma with cataract. Glaucoma isn't super rare, but it's a mostly hereditary disease that affect far from most people. Cataract is a condition caused by the natural aging of the lens, and that will affect everyone if they live long enough.
@@IlIlIlIlIlIlIllIlIII Yeah even my own grandmother had cataracts that she was luckily able to get removed through laser eye surgery a couple of years ago! :)
What's wierd about floaters is that I've actually had it when I was a kid, yet it dissapeared more and more as I grew older (I'm currently 22). Anyone can provide insight on it?
Apprentice optician here. From what I've learned: Floaters are usually debris from within the eye flying around in this jelly-like substance called the Vitreous Humor, which holds the eyeball shape mostly. Debris usually gets trapped in that area because the VH is quite thick so the debris can not really find a way to drain itself out and just floats around(most likely that's how the name originated). Considering the age in which the floaters has occurred, the eyes develop over time and presumably swept the debris somewhere outside of your central and peripheral vision. Usually floaters are still in the eye somewhere if no surgical operations were done, perhaps in the blind spot and additional the brain can act to ignore any minute trace of the floaters as much as possible usually by filling in the area with the background more or less, however everyone experiences differently. Not all eye floaters are too detrimental, so the brain practically says whatever to non life-threating floaters. Mostly if the frequency of floaters progresses and what causes the floaters is severe- that's where the medical professional will step in. I hoped I have helped to some extent, typing online is a bit limited with explanations and I'm giving a macro-opinion on the situation. Good to hear it's not bothering you
I once got a wicked eye infection because I left my lenses in water overnight and then didn't wash my hands before putting them back in. I know I was an idiot. Thankfully my eyes recovered but it took years. I almost went blind and I'm at high risk of further issues as I age.
Never let your contactlenses come in contact with water. There is a parasite called acanthamoeba in water from your sink which can cause severe damage to your cornea and corneal scarring because it like to burrow deep in your cornea. Treatment is very painful because you get very strong eye drops multiple times a day to kill it.
@@abigray8585 yer you're only meant to use the special lenses solution not water. I knew this but didn't have any on had because I went on a unexpected weekend bender
I had 20/15 vision until last year. My vision was worse during my last two pregnancies. It didn't return to normal after my last baby! So now I only have 20/20 vision. I do wear glasses at night time for driving to get me back to my beloved better than "perfect" 20/15 vision.
Eyes exercises DO help and we have a ton of evidence for that. Since 2008 studies have shown that they can help with presbyopia(because the muscles are trained you can keep focus), myophia(after months the eyes shrinks because it wants to keep a relaxed position), Hyperopia(same reason it happens for myophia the eye shinks because it wants keep a relaxed position). As far as I know those 3 conditions are the only 3 that eyes exercises help. Also if you use a crutch because you hurt your ankle it is fine it won't make it worse but if after it gets better you keep using the muscle will deteriorate because of lack of use and it will get worse over-time(that's not a good analogy for glasses because using always helps).
There are different muscles in and around the eye. The ones that we can voluntarily control are around the eyes & the ones we can't control are inside. Those inside are responsible for focusing a near object by changing the shape of the lens & amount of light entering inside, a process called as accommodation. This accommodation falters with age because of progressive weakening of this muscle & reduced flexibility of the lens. So, the pencil push ups mentioned in this video can help a little bit for delaying presbyopia, but cannot help in myopia or hypermetropia.
@@nachiketpargaonkar8646 Actually the exercise that helps with those 3 conditions trains the muscles INSIDE the eye the ones you can't directly control. Basically you pick 2 distances 1 where you have perfect vision and another where you almost have perfect vision. You put any object on the area where you have "perfect" vision just so you can focus your vision on that point(that way you use the muscles without controling them) and on the other point (slightly far if you have myophia, slightly closer if you have hyperopia), you have 2 options: Option 1 you need something to read. Option 2 you need something that moves so your eye can track it. The exercise: You focus for 30s on the point you have perfect vision than read or follow the object for 10 minuts and repeats that for at least 30 minutes and 2h at most(there are no improviments after 2h and you get diminishing returns after 40 minutes). Those exercises were derived from the pencil push ups that why they look similar. Also, they don't miracles either basically you waste at least half an hour of your day everday and you can expect a 0.5~~2 for every year(if they were stable before) and 0~~3 if they were not(they won't keep getting worse if were not stable and can even improve faster for some reason that we don't know it is speculated age). Another curious thing is those exercises can improve your vision beyond 20/20 range with the help of lenses but on the studies this generally caused light sensitivity problems for some reason.
@@nicholasfigueiredo3171 I'm still skeptical about this method, since the visual acuity which we test our distant vision is measured with the reading chart at a distance of 20 feet/6 metres, a distance where accommodation (action of the ciliary muscle that is inside the eye) is totally relaxed, so you can't really go beyond that by any exercise. Also I haven't read about any such exercise helping in visual acuity in any of the ophthalmology books.
@@fia6559 I dont remember what our was called. This was 12+ years ago. But it came with 3D glasses and I had to watch moving boxes and indicate when then converged. It did help.
Yeah, those eye exercises do help for binocular vision and accommodative issues. I wish they would have addressed that they weren’t talking on behalf of those but rather the “eye exercises” people think they can do to reverse their glasses prescriptions.
This is actually such a reassuring video. I have myopia, and I worry about it getting worse, but it's fascinating to hear it may actually reverse! And i always get sun protection coating on my glasses lol
I think one on hearing would also be useful. Is it really inevitable that we lose our hearing when we age? Is it a sign of dementia? Why are those with poor hearing more at risk of dementia?
Yes, I want to see this as well. Also tips to keep your hearing as good as possible for as long as possible
No being able to hear is bad for your brain. Also, people that don't hear well tend to isolate themself from others. This being "cut off" from the world is a huge risk factor to develop dementia!
I hear You, brother! Also appreciate how a channel named Little Voice is recommending something about hearing.
I wonder if diet is connected with hearing loss (besides trauma) as it is with dementia. Because genetics can be dormant or triggered according to one’s diet more or less
That's simple. Loud noises of any sort can damage hearing.
To protect hearing don't listen to music too loud, particularly on earphones/earbuds,and if operating loud machinery use ear protecters
I am glad to hear that blue light isn't actually damaging. My full time job is working on the computer,but I never opted to get the blue light filter which would always shock my optometrist. But the truth is, I need to see colours correctly with my job and the filter interferes with that too much. I was always worried I was choosing to ruin my eyes to be able to pay my bills 😅
I don't know if it's some Placebo effect but without that blue light filter my eye feels drier than usual
Blue light by itself is not dangerous, but the narrow band blue light peak emitted by most LED backlit screens is. It's high intensity of light concentrated in very narrow spectrum. If it was spread out over wider frequency band (like natural light sources), then it wouldn't have such high toxicity for the tissue.
they didn't say blue light isn't damaging to your eyesight or health, they just said there is no reasearch can claim such thing as to right now meaning there is no reaserch who shows blue light is damaging or not dammging to the eyesight therefore blue light can still be damaging and you simpley don't know it yet.
@@lala-bp3wh bruh they just said our eyes have protection against blue light. She even mentioned specifically that we have "Lutein and Zeaxanthin" in our eyes that protects us from blue light. The only reason why it affects our eyes is when we use gadgets before sleep causing insomnia or when we forgot to blink.
@@lala-bp3wh plus if it were even slightly true then we would have a pandemic of blindness.
Regardless of 'damaging' eyes, when I got blue light filter glasses I stopped experiencing eye strain/twitching. My eyes would always start twitching around 2 o'clock at work. I got blue light filters over a year ago and haven't had the problem since. I won't be switching back just to save a few bucks.
Well, they do say blue light filters reduce light sensitivity and glare and make you feel more comfortable when you work (2:10)
Brk u heard intro? This is fake. They said contact lense cant het stuck behind eye
every heard of a placebo 🤓
@@pilkzzz Yeah, as in you can place 'ez bollz in ya mouth. (It's a stretch but I think it works 🤔)
they just say there is no proof that it does damage your eyes, what they say blue light does affect you differently like can give you insomina but those bluefilter just helps in making you feel comfortable and help with light sensitivity
Contacts can't got lost behind the eye, but they can get lost at the top. Happened to me when I first was getting them in 7th grade. The first time one somehow got stuck past my eye lid and when I was putting on the replacement, it fell out and the doc was like I've never seen that before. The floaters one is the most scary to me because my current eye doctor told me that the vein to my eye is pretty thin and said my eye could fall out if it gets thin enough, so if I start to see more and more floaters, to contact her ASAP.
this happened to me just today! the lens got lost at the top lmao
Your eye won’t fall out. If you see floaters or flashes that COULD be a sign of a retinal detachment which could lead to blindness
The problem is that the retina, the patch of nerve cells at the back of the inside of the eye, which react to light and without which we can't see,needs a good blood supply.
If something interrupts that blood supply, such as damage to the capillaries (very small blood vessels)that carry blood to the retina,then those cells can be damaged.
Once the retina is damaged,there is nothing that can be done to fix it.
BUT, there are things that can be done to improve the blood supply before that happens/re attach your retina if it detaches ,such as laser surgery.
If you have bad floaters,this can mean there is damage to the capillaries, though generally it doesn't. But an eye check is a good idea .
If you have bad floaters,then suddenly loose an area of sight in your eye,like a dark spot that doesn't move,you need to seek treatment straight away,as you DO have damage to the capillaries/a detached retina
The sooner you get treatment, the more likely it is that your retina/its blood supply can be repaired and your sight will be fine
Never take chances with your sight
happened to me too😭😭😭freaked out while trying to find my contact bc i thought i dropped it but it was slid to the right of my eye
The top, sides, and bottom. Basically the contact won't go all the way behind the eye, but it can get stuck anywhere around the edges as far back as your conjunctiva connects. It happens to me fairly often (as in a few times a year), usually when my eyes are really dry and the contact catches on my eye lid and rolls up.
I was literally "prescribed" eye exercises by my ophthalmologist. He said my problem wasn't myopia but rather exhaustion of my eye muscles, which was later confirmed by a dysautonomia specialist. I'm wondering if maybe there are cases where eye exercises or eye rests do help, or whether my eye doctor was simply misinformed.
Following
They stated that eye exercises don't help with myopia and other vision-impairing conditions; so if a professional told you that it wasn't myopia and rather a specific problem with your eye muscles than eye exercises can probably help somewhat since it has to do with your muscles.
What they mean is that eye exercises won't help you with said conditions, or magically improve your vision from where it is now. It can help with eye strain.
@@blasianking4827 Thank you! That makes sense. Sometimes these videos can lack nuance which can be confusing.
Losing weight & fasting improved by vision & reduced myopia.
From my experience, when I checked my myopia in the morning and evening, the numbers are different. It is very recommended to check your eyes early of the day, otherwise your eyes are tired during eye check in the evening and lead to inaccurate numbers.
I can't believe none of my eye doctors told me that Polarized lenses don't necessarily block UV.
I've lived in high UV places most of my life and have worked outdoors. I was so careful to get polarized lenses because I'd been told by family members those were the most effective against UV.
Only now am I learning I could've been better protecting my eyes this whole time!
sunglasses work better than polarized
some doctors be prioritizing profit over doing their duty to help their patients
One thing I learned from experience is that the glasses won't make your vision worse, BUT since I got my glasses way too late (in my 20s) I had already gotten used to not seeing right(shortsighted + astigmatism). Then as I started to wear them every waking hour, I got used to seeing perfectly fine. So now, when I take them off, I trip and run into stuff more often than I did before, but that is not because I see worse but because I am no longer compensating by being exceptionally careful. I think that often causes people to mistakenly believe their vision got worse.
How do you know glasses won't make your vision worse? Do you know excessive near work leads to myopia?
Aren't you familiar with primate studies 30 years where they had minus lenses put in front of their eyes, and they developed myopia.
Hard to fight the general ignorant public that doesn't want to hear anything/do his own research about this subject.
1.Take 100 7 year old kids who are illiterate and check their vision 2-3 years after
2.Take 100 7 year old kids who do 10hrs reading at 30cm and check their vision 2-3 years after
3.Take 100 7 year old kids who are always outside but are put with -3.00D minus lenses and check their naked vision 2-3 years after.
scenario 2+3 = Myopia, and this is proven by science.
@@DoubleOpposite You seem to be completely unable to de-tangle how causal relationships work. But it's okay. Watch the video again, maybe you'll understand it this time around, although I highly doubt that.
@@diablo4093 You're ignorant to science, and its fine by me
In science, near work and minus lenses cause myopia
In medical myth however, no
@@DoubleOpposite You do realise that if people started off with perfect vision and wore the lenses long term, their eyes would actually adjust to lenses and end up inducing myopia? The monkey and the kids wearing the minus lenses scenarios are not really proving that nearwork causes myopia because the lenses are already a huge factor, so perhaps reference more examples where they only have nearwork activities involved in the experiment to better support your argument.
If something hits your eye but you’re eye is closed will not end up getting low vision. I rinsed something off my eye lids in the shower today and I had water fall on my face for five minutes and my mom told me that water from a shower falling on your eyes could cause permeant damage and oh dear I had shower water fall on my face for five minutes but my eyes were closed the whole time I did it. If someone rinses his or her face under shower water for five minutes with shower water with his or her eyes closed would the water falling on your face still damage the person’s eyes and cause the person to get low vision even though the person’s eyes were shut while the water was falling on the person’s face?
My friend kept seeing floaters and when she got herself checked, it turned out it was blood and found out she has a growth in her brain. Always get yourself checked when something feels off.
In other cases.. if you keep seeing one, two floaters or more.. it could be the early sign of retinal detachment.. which is could lead to permanent blindness if not do any early treatment.. do check to your ophthalmologist.. not optometrist
@@soupricemf1260 only if they suddenly appear. Floaters are normal due to proteins and are usually not an issue.
@@SmallSpoonBrigade not the sudden appear.. im talking about the permanent floaters/ same shape and position of the floaters in one or two eyes
@@soupricemf1260 what about floaters in three eyes? jk
@@GunwantBhambra u are the devil then
It may not be damaging, but as someone who spends 60-80 hours a week in front of screens, I had noticably reduced eye fatigue, and general eye strain, when I started using glasses with a filter. The filter isn't even really noticeable on day-to-day things either, it just takes the edge off and makes a huge difference for me.
While it certainly is unusual, it's not impossible to sneeze with your eyes open. I was recently diagnosed with a condition called Bell's Palsy, where one half of my face experienced muscles weakness. One of the symptoms included a weakened eyelid and blink reflex, so when I sneezed, I was fully able to see out of that eye every time. It was rather uncomfortable, and luckily healed up soon after, but because of that I can say that I have sneezed with one eye open.
I'm sorry, I'm sure it was a very uncomfortable experience, but the mental image of this is pretty funny. I'm glad you're doing better now.
Exactly, when I heard as a kid that one couldn't sneeze with their eyes open, I literally held my eyelids while I sneezed just to prove I could, and I still have both eyes
“One eye open when I’m sleeping on eeeeye”
It's hard when you're driving and you're about to sneeze because you have to keep focused on the road, just closing your eyes for a second can be frightening.
one eye open when I'm sneezing
Lasik: I had LASIK twice. I was 5/200 prior to Lasik. Went to 20/15, back to 10/20, before the revision. My eyes have settled to a very mild near-sighted again. I hover around 15/20 or -0.75 in both eyes now. I would love not needing glasses, but at least now I'm not legally blind if I forget them at home. The procedure did fix an astigmatism that was developing!
What does 5/200 mean?
@@rg9991 I believe 5/200 means that the smallest thing he can see from 5 feet away, a normal person could see the same thing from 200 feet away. So imagine a huge sign on the streets, this person would have to be 5 feet away to see the huge sign that a normal person can see from across the street.
@@TARS.. ok so what would that be in normal sign convention?
@@rg9991 20/800. Lasik is a terrible idea. You're fundamentally damaging the structure of already delicate tissues. They'll fail progressively over time and studies are just starting to show this.
@@TARS.. my both eyes are around -4.25-4.5 the last time I checked. Though I'm not blind, I can survive in the house without the glasses and can perform the daily routine, there's no way I can last a few hours outside as I can't see shit.
Commenting to boost the algorithm. I'm a COA in Arizona and more patients need to see this video. Very well done, very comprehensive, and of course very accurate. Thank you to the production team and the doctors.
enjoy your profits off of glasses sales. I'm not sure how you people sleep at night. I guess I would sleep well if I made that much money'
@daniyal chaudhry Nice try with the sarcasm deceiver. Eye exercises work and the only proof that they don't is the fact that optometrists refuse to study them because it would lose them tons of sales.
@@rhythimrt9970 LMFAO!
@@rhythimrt9970eye exercises train the eye muscles how tf would it change the shape of ur eyeball
Thanks for debunking the blue light myth. I was tired of seeing the green tint so when I got a new pair of lenses I purposefully opted for plain glasses and that helped me to save Rs300 (that's like 4 dollars). My Doctor said I should keep using blue light glasses but I just refused and now thanks to you I am more than sure that I made the right choice.
Same, the shop I went to kept pestering me to "upgrade" the blue light lens but I feel so sleepy using them so I went for the normal version and saved $100!
Seems like every shop wants to push for those blue light filters, they probably get paid commission for it.
It's not a myth. These two medical doctors, like most medical doctors, wildly unscientific, are clueless about the basic science and cannot even infer a truly logical consequence of the hypothesis that they wish to refute [01:16]. The conclusion that blue light damages eyes owes to decades of research.
One could question much of the data's clinical relevance to freeliving humans. But these medical doctors spout nonsense by reducing it all to a myth due to media report of a 2018 study on cells not even retinal. And refuting the hypothesis by alleging that it entails a "pandemic of blindness" is sheer inanity.
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Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", _PLoS One,_ 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853
Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", _Int J Ophthalmol,_ 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436
Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", _Oxid Med Cell Longev,_ 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186
Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", _Biomed Pharmacother,_ 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817
Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", _Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci,_ 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
Here are a couple of abstracts especially succinct:
W T Ham Jr, "Ocular hazards of light sources: Review of current knowledge", _J Occup Med,_ 1983 Feb;25(2):101-103. PMID 6834158
Jiangmei Wu, Stefan Seregard & Peep V Algvere, "Photochemical damage of the retina", _Surv Ophthalmol,_ 2006 Sep-Oct;51(5):461-481. PMID 16950247
I gotta say if your family has cases of macular degeneration I would still use blue light Filters. but otherwise I don't see any arguments for them and I only sell them if a patient/ customer wants them.
and they can enhance contrast vision so if you have problems there also good investment.
One thing to note (and this is explained in the video but most people seemed to not actually watch it, just read the thumbnail): while blue light is not harmful to your eyes, it can still affect your circadian rhythm. Blue light sends the signal to our brain that it's daytime, and that we should be more alert. Setting a blue light filter on your phone, computer, etc., using blue light filtering glasses, or simply limiting nighttime screen use can all be beneficial to your sleep, and thus to your health.
They wont answer you now.
I don't think this is scientifically proven either. I saw studies that didn't find correlation between blue light and sleep. What did seem to have a correlation is how engaged you are when you're using your phone/computer before bed. For example if you're reading a very exciting book before bed it doesn't matter if it's on a phone screen with blue light or on a piece of paper - you're going to have trouble falling asleep. I don't have a link, but I found it by just googling.
If the original study about blue light damaging your eyes was done with cervical cancer cells, does that mean blue light could potentially treat cervical cancer? If so I think that could be really cool.
that’s what i was thinking.
I also thought the same
Blue light can change dna in a cell and changed dna if mutated can cause cancer so it's hit or trail it not always gona kill
It's proably inferior to the current cancer treatment options out there. From what I gather what they mean is that blue light can kill ALL cells if they're not protected by those specific pigments in our eyes. This is basically what the current radiation/x-ray therapy methods already do, but at a higher efficiency.
The problem with that is that visible blue light can't really penetrate our skin and get to the cancer. If it could, you'd be able to see your screen through your hand. That's why we use other types of radiation that can actually penetrate the body and attack the cancer cells
When I 1st started wearing contacts I wore gas-permiable contacts. My sophomore year I got poked in the eye and felt the lense go behind my eyelid. I went to 2 different ophthalmologists and could not find anything even though I could feel something there for 2 years. 12 years later I went for a routine ophthalmologists visit and when examining my eye lid. I blinked and my contact lens popped out with a whole bunch of skin cells growing on top and below it.
That’s horrifying! I still wear gas permeable contacts.
spooky
That’s the most horrible physical reaction I’ve ever got from a story
Wow. That sounds insane! GP lenses are hard, so its crazy to think that it stayed in your eye for that long without causing you severe discomfort.
I somehow want to see this
I think people think the only reason blue light is damaging is because it can so-called "cause eye deterioration". Yes and no. Blue light doesn't directly affect your eyes, but because your eyes don't really close when you're playing a game or concentrating on a video, it can cause eye strain and dryness, which then those symptoms lead to blurriness.
should I keep blinking in between?
@@lucidgames2580 yeah
thats what i do and i also look away from the screen like every 20 - 30 mins for about 10 seconds and then i continue playing
It's no and no. Blue light isnt harmful, prolonged screen time w/o rest is
I think i have this case. Usually i play games straight 9 hours if i'm not busy at school or even 12 hours straight. Now my eyes is soooo blurry😢. Do you guys thing LASIK will help my eyes?😢
Actually, blue light irradiation of lipofuscin results in the production of free radicals. Retinal cells accumulate lipofuscin over time, which is why blue light is especially hazardous to older individuals, but not so much to younger individuals.
I had LASIK and after 10 years my eyesight was so near-sighted I had to get glasses again. Yet my mother-in-law and husband had LASIK before me, it's been about 20 years since their surgeries, and they can still see perfectly. So you never know how it'll go.
Can't you just get it again?
@@neo-filthyfrank1347 not really. LASIK literally shoots your eyes with lasers. boring into them.
@@zorpglorp Children with rudimentary understanding of subjects should not be commenting acting like they know anything.
@@neo-filthyfrank1347 toxic much... and who says i'm a child? just because i play video-games? Bullshit.
@@neo-filthyfrank1347 also you're wrong anyways because every source is telling me that LASIK uses special cutting lasers to change the shape of your cornea, which is basically boring small holes into them. which is not able to be fixed, as your eyes are well, your eyes. Maybe you should do some research.
Hey guys. Orthoptist here. As always I was scared that this is once again a video that spreads bullshit but thank God I can say that all of this is very true and both of the docs really know what they are talking about. Thanks for the video
Hey guys, Theoretical Physicist here. As always, I like turtles. That is all, thank you.
shut up.
Hey guys, IT here. As always, I hate printers. That is all, thank you.
@Anirudh no sphynx?
@@MaverickZero86 bazingaa
Not just in eyes, but in skin and hair too. Pigment takes a little bit to come in. I hear a lot of silly stories from first time parents thinking that a child isn't theirs because the pigment hasn't come in. I'm half native, half white. Everyone in my family was born blonde and blue eyed like my mother and then half of us kids had our eyes and skin darken, and all of us had our hair darken to varying shades of brown and black like my father.
My mother's eyes also changed from blue to green when she was 43 while undergoing chemotherapy. They've been green ever since. Not sure why that is.
You mother had or has yellow skin or something? Because if she has a condition that affects liver and the skin became little yellow that can be a thing, because yellow with blue give you green right ? I don't know just talking, don't know how silly i am right now in this commentary but... or she eats lots of carrot? Rs that's turn your skin yellow too
@@leetat.t8093 that is the stupidest theory I've heard lmao
@@leetat.t8093 yellow skin is common for newborn babies but they later fade away as they grow up.
@@leetat.t8093 Bodies don't work like crayons or paint 💀
I can understand the "glasses makes your vision worse" one. One thing I've noticed that people don't think about is that when you take off your glasses, your vision IS worse than usual for a short time. Just like with light level adjustments it takes a little time for your eyes to adjust to not having the glasses again. After a few minutes you'll notice your glasses-less vision is just as good (or lets be real, probably as bad) as usual.
yeahh its just adjustment to the new normal
It is the stupidest thing but I often find myself becoming a little frustrated when it's shower time because it means removing my glasses and now I can't see very well 😂. If I'm in bed on my phone, I don't mind not wearing them but once I leave my room, or I'm up moving around, I really need them.
I wonder if people who have contacts wear them in the shower as well or would that cause steam on the lenses...
For me it was more permanent, I had to stop wearing glasses and my "normal" vision restored only after a few weeks.
@@BewareTheLilyOfTheValley it doesn't cause steam on lenses but lenses don't really like water, so if any gets in, it makes them less flexible and makes you feel like you have super dry eyes. I did shower with them a few times mostly by forgetting I have them on but then I read about scary bacteria that can stay in your eye under the lenses and now I religiously take them out even when swimming in a pool 😅
Glasses do make your eyesight worse. The more you use them the worse your vision will get. This has been demonstrated scientifically.
Love this ❤️. I especially liked that you spoke about blue light glasses. While we advise patients to get them, it’s unethical to threaten them with vision loss if they don’t use them.
So true and I hate when professionals do that. I've never and will never tell px they will lose vision when recommending blue light specs, it feels unethical.
Thank you for mentioning the blue light myth! I constantly get asked about buying blue-light blocking for my glasses, and I always say no, although for a different reason than most people. I have narcolepsy, a disorder that severs the connection between my circadian rhythm and the rest of my brain and causes neurotransmitter imbalances as a result.
In a healthy brain, a neurotransmitter called orexin directs when other wakefulness promoting neurotransmitters are released. As just one example, dopamine levels spike in the morning, giving you the urge to get out of bed.
My orexin-producing neutrons are mostly or completely gone as of an autoimmune attack that happened when I was 14. With no orexin to direct the brain, dopamine, norepinephrine, histamine, serotonin, GABA, and other important neurotransmitters don't get released in the normal organized way.
In the same way that a diabetic has to do the job of their pancreas, I have to do the same for my hypothalamus through medications and lifestyle changes. Blue light promotes wakefulness, so I use it during the day to remind my brain that it's wakefulness time. At night, my lights switch to yellow, which helps my brain settle down for sleep. It’s not a life-changing strategy by any means, and I definitely need several medications as well, but it does help!
Interesting! I have narcolepsy too. Unfortunately, blue light doesn't do a good job at keeping me awake. I know this because i tried gaming during the pandemic but i wasn't taking enough medication at the time and i couldn't even do it for 10 minutes (which resulted in losing an hour of trying to stay awake). Games on the smartphone are even worse. It think it is more exhausting because the screen is smaller.
@@sarahvandekerkhof1458 That’s fair! Even among narcoleptics, the strategies and medications that work for one person may not work for another. I should clarify that I can’t just use blue light on my phone, I have to use certain light bulbs in floor lamps to get the best effect. I have a color-changing smart bulb in my floor lamp, and I use a combo of routines on the Cync and Google Home apps to control it throughout the day. I also have a regular 60-watt equivalent LED daylight light bulb in my desk lamp lamp, since I don’t need that one to turn on/off or switch colors on it’s own.
Blue light from my phone doesn’t help much with wakefulness during the day, but I definitely need the night shift filter at night to help combat that wonderful narcolepsy insomnia 🙃 I always ended up playing ACNH until 4 AM when I was home at the beginning of the pandemic lol
I hope you both well and stay healthy. Seriously
It is not a myth. These doctors didn't give full information. There's an actual research done on it and it's been discussed via neuroscientists like Andrew Huberman.
I have convergence insufficiency and once a week I had to do some really cool 3D exercises as a kid. The ophthalmologist put red/blue glasses on me and I had to try to align some figures at different depths.
My ophthalmologist wasn't nearly as cool, I was just handed a pencil and told to focus on it as close as I could every day.
I actually had more than one cases where one of my contact lenses was folded and hiding probably where the top of my eyeball is, so not really at the far back. I felt it being loose and when blinking I lost it, assuming it had fallen somewhere in my bathroom. The first time that occurred, I thought nothing of it and just replaced it. I didn’t realize until the next day when I woke up with an irritated eye that there was something in there. Had to lift my upper eyelid, look down and do a massaging move to bring down whatever was up there. It was folded in half and tucked in there, and I could feel nothing except a very mild irritation. The following times a similar contact “loss” happened I knew exactly where to check and it was kind of a non-issue since then. Recently I had Lasik and glad I don’t have to stick anything in my eyes for the rest of my life (hopefully)
This is why I always wear glasses. Contacts are too much of a pain
Had this happen to me so many times!! Was looking to see if anyone else commented on this.
Blue light? I was checked in school and again at 18 years old during regular checkups and passed with normal color vision.
After being around welding for a dozen years I failed the color vision section of my examination. A 21 picture battery and I missed all 7 blue cards.
I work in aluminum ships etc with very reflective mirror-like walls. Even in another room facing away from the welding we get significant blue light.
The doctor giving the exam told me I was lying about passing previously because (in his words) color vision doesn't change. He didn't care to check my record.
I mention these results to all my eye doctors over the years (I am now 62) and get mixed results including "Hmm" and "I did not know that".
More than one has stated: Without a doubt, the intense blue light from welding has lowered the sensitivity of my blue cones.
Many welders over the years have been blinded by the light radiation.
While UV is blamed for burns and blisters on the eyes, welding light contains intense visible (red green and blue) light, ultraviolet, and infrared radiation.
I think it's time to update your myths. At least include exceptions and qualifiers in your language.
Fair point -- normal intensity blue light may not be damaging, but high intensity of blue light (and maybe other wavelengths too?) might cause damage.
any intense electromagnetic radiation, blue or not will be damaging to the eyes. This is nothing specific about blue light. Not even comparable to blue light in our screens - it's like comparing a pottasium isotope in a banana to a chuck of uranium lmao.
@@ambatuBUHSURK Sooooo, my objection is to the "MYTH" that blue light hurts your eyes. You seem to agree that it can. I can no longer see blue as well as I should. Numerous jobs (like a pilot) require perfect color vision. My eyes are permanently damaged. GFY with that banana lmao.
I have convergence insufficiency and I did vision therapy for about a year. It definitely improved my vision. However, I do need glasses because my eyes get strained very easily. The glasses just help my eyes relax and give them a break from focusing so hard.
Cbd helps eyes from straining
Have a history of glaucoma in the family and my pressures were elevated. Dr. gave me drops to rule out that issue and only used on one eye. Pressure dropped but not enough to warrant continuation. Turns out that my cornea is thicker than usual (my brother has the same) so the Dr. took me off the drops. If I recall correctly, those drops may cause eyelashes to grow more but also, over time, could have made my blue eyes become darker - which isn't a bad thing, just not a desired outcome as I and others rather fancy their color.
The drops that make your eye lashes grow are prostaglandins so the drugs such as bimatoprost, latanoprost, travoprost and tafluprost. Usually they are used in both eyes since they can darken the iris. The iris is less likely to change in colour if your eyes are fully blue with no specs if green and brown. There are no changes in colour once you stop using the drug however.
So does this mean blue light can possibly be used to treat cervical cancer?
Unfortunately, you could only expose the outer layer of the tumor, and not even all of that layer. Also, the intensity of light required would generate heat and could also damage adjoining tissues.
Yes, light/laser is an available tool, but if the tumor is that readily accessible, it could be removed more completely and easily by freezing - such as a wart.
My brother is just starting treatment for prostate cancer using radiation seeds and a fine laser beam.
E Zrenner, "[Light-induced damage to the eye]", Fortschr Ophthalmol, 1990;87 Suppl:S41-51. PMID 2083911
Peep V Algvere, John Marshall, Stefan Seregard, "Age-related maculopathy and the impact of blue light hazard", Acta Ophthalmol Scand, 2006 Feb;84(1):4-15. PMID 16445433
Gianluca Tosini, Ian Ferguson & Kazuo Tsubota, "Effects of blue light on the circadian system and eye physiology", Mol Vis, 2016;22: 61-72. PMID 26900325
Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", PLoS One, 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853
Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", Int J Ophthalmol, 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436
Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", Oxid Med Cell Longev, 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186
Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", Biomed Pharmacother, 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817
Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
I've been wearing contact lenses since 1986, I've never had an eye infection in all those years, never had a problem wearing them, can put them in and out without a mirror, I hate glasses. My husband is 86 and has 20/20 vision but has glaucoma, had one cataract done but can't have other one done due to damage from glaucoma. Thanks for this girls!
Have a well earned thumbs up! The point this became clear was when you didn't just talk about how blue light doesn't hurt your eyes, but does have other effects (e.g. difficulty sleeping).
As a truck driver I rarely wore Sun glasses. Because it's easier to just deal with the glare then cleaning my sunglasses. I think this will change after seeing this video. Also I'm way overdue to see an optometrist. Thank you.
Why the background is blue 💀
Cause it's make u feel clam and trust ful 😅
Why ask?! 😂😂😂
Why ask?!
I wear contact lenses, and sometimes when they get dry and I rub my eyes they may get folded and get stuck usually on top of my eyes. It takes a little bit of effort to get them out, but you can definitely feel like there’s something stuck there, so I don’t know how that woman didn’t notice it to the point she had 4 lenses stuck in her eyes.
For me, whenever I got one too stuck in my eye, I would just put in a new one and close my eye and the old one would crash into it, causing it to come to the front so I can take it out, so I am confused how someone could get 4 stuck also.
As a beginner, Once I was taking out my my right eye contact lense as I got hold of it in my eyes I felt like it just dropped of my fingers in the bathroom, after searching it for minutes, my eyes were bot comfortable and tears would come and I was feeling like there's something stuck in my eyes, I was convinced that the lense might've fallen down and my eyes is itching due any bacteria or something, after 1hour of itch and sorrow, I once again looked the back of my eyes in the mirror and finally realised that it was stuck in my eyes.
Eye exercises do not affect the underlying condition, but they can be used to teach a patient how to work with what they have as well as teaching / strengthening the eye muscles which helps with conditions like strabismus or nystagmus
I have amblyopia (I was also told I had strabismus) and was wondering about this. I hope I didn't wear a pirate patch to school for nothing...
@@Catlily5 honestly, wearing a patch while playing video games is much more effective.
@@Catlily5 For amblyopia patients, patching does help strengthen the weak eye!
@@SmallSpoonBrigade There weren't so many video games when I was growing up. And my father was against technology (despite the fact that he was an engineer). We had no radio, no TV, no microwave. We did have a ball attached to a string hanging from the ceiling. My mom would swing it in various patterns and I wore a patch and followed it with my bad eye.
@@PotatoPieYT Yeah, I do think the patch helped. My eyes don't work together and my bad eye cannot see 20/20 even with glasses. But my friend who never wore a patch can only see light and dark with her bad eye. Maybe her eye is just worse to begin with though.
Finally! I’m so happy to hear someone debunk the age thing! I’m 400 y/o and STILL have good vision, people keep on insisting it’s a myth 😒
Hmm, still young you are. Few days ago, celebrated my 1000th birthday I have.
you are growing up big boy 👍
Oldest man alive, we found him boys!
@@atheistyoda8915 • rookie number, i’m 7777 years old
I think you meant 40 lol
Thank you for the part about blue light. I've been worried for a while now that, even though I have the blue light filter on my phone screen and a slight blue blocker in my glasses, my eyes were being damaged and it would be a problem later on. So thank you for easing my mind!
E Zrenner, "[Light-induced damage to the eye]", Fortschr Ophthalmol, 1990;87 Suppl:S41-51. PMID 2083911
Peep V Algvere, John Marshall, Stefan Seregard, "Age-related maculopathy and the impact of blue light hazard", Acta Ophthalmol Scand, 2006 Feb;84(1):4-15. PMID 16445433
Gianluca Tosini, Ian Ferguson & Kazuo Tsubota, "Effects of blue light on the circadian system and eye physiology", Mol Vis, 2016;22: 61-72. PMID 26900325
Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", PLoS One, 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853
Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", Int J Ophthalmol, 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436
Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", Oxid Med Cell Longev, 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186
Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", Biomed Pharmacother, 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817
Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
I was too
If you believe it’s not damaging. You need help and actually look it up.
I would still keep the filters on all day.
These are two fantastic doctors well respected in the eye space. Nice video!!! The enthusiasm and passion is second to none!
Through a large portion of my 20's I had an issue where if I didn't go outside and do routine cardio (running/walking) my eyesight would be noticeably blurry at most ranges. Going out for around 30 minutes or more and looking at things at various ranges (from the very near to the very far like distant mountains) tended to result in my vision becoming clear again. Later I started taking a specific multivitamin that also contains some "superfood" concentrates and minerals. For whatever reason I've basically preferred to be housebound for the last 3 years (starting a few months before the whole covid thing), rarely going outside, but when I have to (to put out garbage and recycling) I've noticed that instead of my vision being very blurry like it used to be, it is clear at all ranges. I suspect it had a lot to do with me being chronically malnourished when it comes to certain things in those multivitamins, but otherwise well fed.
Edit: Thought I should elaborate on a couple things. Specifically it was after a few days of not going outside that my vision would worsen. The multivitamin is a one a day kind, and not very expensive.
what is the multivitamin which one ?
@@teopeiramatikos Look for "webber naturals most complete multi". They've 4 options, Men, Women and the other two are the same for those 50+ years old.
I do supplement with other things. I had the eye benefits long before taking them but at some point I added a multi-B because I thought I might be a bit low in them. I also take vitamin-C crystals mixed with fruit juice since I think it might benefit the gums to come into direct contact with it (instead of swallowed inside a pill bypassing the gums), C-rich fruits are probably best though. Omega-3 as well, I believe Omega-6 is easy to get in the diet and the human body can manufacture enough Omega-9. I take vitamin-D drops as well since I don't get enough sun daily.
@@dimeuno thank you ill chech them out 🙏
Right, the thing about not being able to fix your eyesight is complete bs. For some kinds of shortsightedness at least. I am basically the same case as you, I started doing some exercises, like shifting focus from near to far and alike, multiple times a day. I can see my eyesight improving every few days.
@@bgdgdgdf4488 I play apex legends at the top level, competing with pro players even. If I don't do eye execs for a few months, I'll perform like trASSh. But a few days of eye exercises? back to 20/20. I even have a chart printed out to test it. You download them and use a measuring tape to space out where to stand and then boom, goodbye to optometry's "degree holding" salesmen.
Another tip= if you feel like something in is your eye and nothing comes out, your eye most likely got scratched which can be helped if you go to an optometrist or you can deal with the pain and it should heal
Ayy thanks dealing with it rn
You can buy sterile saline (salt water)eye drops over the counter at pharmacy's.
If your eyes feel gritty and painful, like there is something in them,but they aren't red ,simply flushing them out with these will probably put them right.
If you still have a problem after a couple of days,and having used the drops as instructed by the pharmacist,you should see a doctor. You might have an eye infection and need antibiotic drops/ointment
Damage to the epithelial cells from the cornea also called corneal staining heals very quickly so just don't rub your eyes and it should heal in 24 hours. When the damage is deeper it can take a bit longer to heal. But if the damage is so deep that it penetrates the stromal layer then you will probably end up with corneal scarring
It can also be an allergen. Rinse your eyes out with eye saline.
I used to look at a screen for hours it got my eyes dry and the far away things seemed blurry. But then I started going out more with friends and living a more healthier life. It somehow solved that issue and then i was able to look at far away things easily
Same here. It’s amazing what a change in habits will do. It’s absolutely mind boggling more doctors don’t talk about this.
Same here! I use Rose water drops to relieve it. Could you tell me in detail how you got rid of it?
Late to the party, but that's simply due to not blinking enough when watching screens. We normally blink between 20-30 times per minute, but when in front of a screen that amount decreases to about 1-2 times/min. That has a crucial effect on the dryness of your eyes, especially if those minutes add up to several hours.
I really love when Professionals debunk myths💗😌🌟✨.
Some of these myths are spread by professionals though...easier targets are the blue light, which gets them a return cause a "blue light filter" option when we get new glass lens are paid with a premium price and one and the eye exercise to improve the lens and the muscles around it are everywhere on youtube, spread by actual eye doctors.
@@kurok1tenshi the blue light journal cited in the video is dated 2018 so im not surprised if there's still some professionals out there spreading myth abt it since it's relatively new (
They;re not professionals at all.
E Zrenner, "[Light-induced damage to the eye]", Fortschr Ophthalmol, 1990;87 Suppl:S41-51. PMID 2083911
Peep V Algvere, John Marshall, Stefan Seregard, "Age-related maculopathy and the impact of blue light hazard", Acta Ophthalmol Scand, 2006 Feb;84(1):4-15. PMID 16445433
Gianluca Tosini, Ian Ferguson & Kazuo Tsubota, "Effects of blue light on the circadian system and eye physiology", Mol Vis, 2016;22: 61-72. PMID 26900325
Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", PLoS One, 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853
Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", Int J Ophthalmol, 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436
Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", Oxid Med Cell Longev, 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186
Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", Biomed Pharmacother, 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817
Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
Wonderfully informative. Thanks to both eye doctors for your clear explanations :)
Only one of them is a medical doctor.
@@MrAwesomeSquad So? They are both eye doctors so your point is irrelevant
@@carrela1000 there's an ENORMOUS difference between a medical doctor and someone you see in a Walmart.
@@MrAwesomeSquad What are you even talking about? One of them is a medical doctor that specialises in eyes and the other one is a licensed eye doctor. It's literally in the name! The optometrist is a licensed doctor and completed a doctorate degree in optometry plus clinical training. The only difference is that one has an MD and the other one doesn't. She is a doctor, maybe not a medical doctor but still a doctor. Therefore, they are both eye doctors so the OP is correct. Only one of them can perform medical and surgical operations but they both treat eyes. I don't know which Walmart hires optometrists as staff and pays them as much as an optometrist earns. You may be confusing her with an optician (also not found in Walmarts either) because I hope you're not dumb enough to devalue this woman's hard work just because she doesn't have an MD and the other one does.
@@MrAwesomeSquad TIL that optometrists go to Walmart while ophthalmologist don't...
6:12 "eye exercises" are also used for improving accommodation. Some people have isues with that so there are exercises that help the brain to relearn how to accommodate the lens.
I cured my lazy eye with eye exercises! At 21 years old as well… I was wearing eye patches and glasses since I was 4. Sometimes when I am tired I wear contact lenses. If I wear them too long I notice my eyes are weaker and turn in again. I then do a few eye exercises and the eye stops turning in.
I was really determined though haha
Does your vision actually get better? Or just stop turning in
@@Daniel-ng2ru Vision is pretty much the same. I never had an issue seeing.. but the light felt too strong and couldn’t control it before. I
Initially I was 4.5+ and went back and now 2.0+ after I fixed it.
@@DoubleTheDom alright thanks for feedback 👍
What eye exercises did you do?
@@preetibla like 10 around the world clockwise and anti clockwise, up down up down x 10 side side, diagonal etc. give it a go! Maybe it will correct for 1 minute… keep trying and the eye will be stronger
As a practicing Optometrist and Lecturer I can confirm all these facts and discussions are true. I wish all my patients would watch your video before asking the usual "silly"/misguided questions!
Simon, I thought that children DO see worse wearing glasses hence, Ortho-K, multifocus lenses, atropine, to slow myopia progression.
Whereas, if kids do nothing except get more powerful glasses over time - their myopia will worsen?
@@Allan-et5ig Actually two interesting seperate issues/theories. It has been shown that wearing the correct myopic prescription tends to stop the eye progressively getting worse (longer) COMPARED TO under prescribing/not wearing spectacles. Myopia will progress anyway through teenage years as the eye naturally grows depending on hertitage/genetics.
Myopia management as you mention correctly is a "new" way of considering how to stem the axial growth of the eye by tricking it by blurring the peripheral vision. This can be achieved with special spectacle lenses or contacts such as the Coopervision MiSight lens.
Atropine in a very low dose can reduce the power of the focusing system (accommodation) which again is thought to be a factor in myopic progression (actually perhaps the most effective method of slowing down the progression of myopia)
OrthoK is a method of correction of the vision, but without the peripheral challenges of spectacles - again some evidence to show this works well.
So... In summary... A massive topic area. Spectacles do not cause a prescription to get worse - infact it protects against some myopia progression (no effect whatsoever on hyperopia (very slight only) or astigmatism).
That's supposed to be your job. Patients ask a professional to educate themselves. Instead you make it seem as if its 'bother' and that's unfortunate.
@@Dorlinedainwen oh trust me I do. But with a limited time in a clinic (20mins per patient here where I am) it limits time between extensive questions and answers and then patient care of looking for eye disease. Hense why this excellent video would explain several of the most common myths asked every day.
@@MrSRMatthews How do they test whether glasses make vision worse?
Also what about the other question that I feel makes more sense rather than asking if they make vision worse: Do glasses prevent/lock out your vision from improving? Glasses help vision but I feel our eyes would adapt to having glasses somewhat.
When I have lost a contact into the top or side of the eye, I have been able to move it forward by gently rubbing the top of my closed eye. The lens is usually folded, but I can then extract it.
Adding blue light filters to my glasses was a game changer once I had to use my computer more for telehealth with my clients.
I wish you had discussed monovision with contacts & about bifocal contacts.
I really love these scientific and educational videos. Channels like Wired, Insider, etc are making learning fun again!
ChatGPT? Is that you?
If I was gaming for long periods (multiple hours a day) for a few days I'd inevitably end up with significant eye strain/fatigue. Yellow lens "driving" glasses completely alleviated the issue. The fact of the matter is, blue light has a shorter wavelength and higher energy than most of what we see and our eyes just don't filter it as well as colors toward the yellow/red end of the visible spectrum. UV is more dangerous than IR precisely due to it's shorter wavelength and higher energy, so it seems obvious blue light would be "worse" than most of the rest.
The one on the right (camera POV) was really good at getting the general point across, and the one on the left, was really good at getting the more technical and in depth stuff.
Overall really great pair of Optometrists :)
Optometrist and opthalmologist* sorry lol, I know someone on their way to become an opthalmologist and he's very picky about the difference, basically opthalmologist's are full on doctors and specialize in the eyes, while optometrist can't do as much I guess? Pediatrist are in the same category as optometrist apparently, where they can't do as much stuff as other doctors. Keep in mind this is all second hand information, so I could be wrong about my explanations! Both careers are highly respectable!
@@alyssaurus17 Both are doctors, but think of ophthalmologists as the specialist performing eye surgeries/procedures, and the optometrist as your primary eye care provider that can diagnose/manage ocular conditions that do not involve major surgeries/procedures :) (I am an optometrist in the US)
@@ahhhhitsteresa where I am from (HK) optometrists study a different 4-year degree while ophthalmologists study a 6 year medical degree plus 6-7 years of specialty training- I guess they’re different everywhere?
@@dgfll Yes it definitely varies by country! Optometrists in the US are probably the most medically trained by comparison to other countries.
Blue light, whether from the sun or a laptop, is very effective at inhibiting melatonin production - thus reducing both the quantity and quality of your sleep - I have found I fall asleep easier when wearing a blue light filter
Thank you ladies, so calm and pedagogical! I would feel very safe as a patient.
I was hoping they would cover this completely about blue light: If it was really true that blue light was damaging to the eyes, we would have a blindness pandemic. But not bcoz of our digital devices but because of the sunlight itself. Sunlight has much more blue light than any of your devices.
Now, the only factor where blue light affects your body is after sun down. Our bodies are such that we don't expect blue light after sun set. So if you keep feeding your eyes blue light after dark, then your body will think it is still day and your sleep cycle will get messed.
That being said, turning on the night mode found on all the devices nowadays is enough. You don't need blue light filter glasses.
That's a good point. While blue light is very likely to cause retinal damage in older individuals (due to lipofuscin accumulation) digital devices are not going to be the primary source of exposure. Rather, all sources of bright light can (and will) cause this form of damage. Not just sunlight, but molecules in the sky also scatter both blue and UV radiation very efficiently (via Rayleigh scattering) meaning that simply looking up at the sky without orange-ish sunglasses can be more harmful than looking at a digital screen in a dark room (which, of course, is also potentially harmful for older individuals with more lipofuscin). That's probably the reason why we haven't seen significantly increased rates of age-associated macular degeneration in the digital age―after all, more screen time presumably means less time spent outdoors.
The character and intensity of blue light from a device (eg LED) and the sun are not comparable.
@@Acetyl53 yes. Intensity of the sun is much much higher. That's why blue light from screens is not at all harmful during the day. And at night you can turn on night mode on the device. No need for any special glasses.
I learned so much from this video! I love these calm, informative, and smart doctors!
I love this episode because it offers BOTH an Opthalmologist (MD) and an Optometrist (OD), both doctors but work usually in different settings. Very cool info and debunking thank you.
Pls elaborate in 20/20 vision
For clarification? Thanks
@@mannygold5367 the top is the test chart distance in feet. ie 20 feet ( or 6 metre) The bottom number is the line of letters on that chart where the strokes and gaps of the letter subtend 1 minute of arc. 1 minute of arc is taken to be the "normal" resolution limit of the human eye. "normal" means what around 66% of people achieve.
Can definitely agree that blue light does not damage the eyes. I'm in front of a computer screen, on average, maybe 80 hours a week or so for YEARS and my vision hasn't gotten any worse. I don't wear glasses and my vision is still considered to be "exceptional."
got near sighted since i was 8 :(
We all make mistakes, I hope you have no future problems and make a full recovery
@@bingkoiE My bf was hit with it at a young age as well. From what I've seen, he's worn glasses since kinder.
Blue light cause issue over a very long time and will raise the risks of early cataract and AMD.
So while it have no immediate effect like a lot of people say, it is nocive.
(And the sun produce a more turquoise kind of light that is beneficial and it' s different than the purpleish blue light from screens and led)
@@SheinelI Over a "very long time." Well, I've spent the last couple decades staring at screens several hours a day, everyday. I work in the tech industry and have also known people who have been in this business much longer than I have, 30+ years older than I am, who still have amazing vision while there are others I've known who never spend time in front of screens that have suffered vision loss and/or cataracts before they even hit their teenage years.
Both my parents had blue eyes and I was brown eyed until I was an adult. My eyes are now olive green/hazel with touches of blue about the iris. I also was born with nystagmus. I was told that even though nystagmus creates vision issues, it is actually a neurological problem.
Thanks for the information!
Oh. So, eye exercise does not work to correct your vision but just to let your eyes relax.
As a person with red-green colour deficiency, I can say that my biggest two issues in life are public bathrooms and diode lamps on electronics. If I am visiting a bathroom which uses a green "vacant" symbol or red "occupied" symbol that has only colour and no text, I can't really be sure if it actually is green or red, so I have to check the stall door to know, automatically turning me into "that guy".
I also can't easily know if electronic diodes show green, yellow, or red most of the time, which can be annoying considering I work in IT and often have to work with switches, routers, and other gadgets that use diodes with changing colours to inform the user of status.
Society, start using blue vs red instead of green vs red please!
What about making a necklace pendant out of transparent red or green glass and when you are not sure, look through it to see if it gets darker or not?
@@charlieangkor8649 Interesting life hack! I should try it out!
I have myopia. After doing eye exercises for a year straight, then getting tested again I was told my eye sight improved a fair bit and I have noticed it too. I wouldn’t skip out on eye exercises.
Yup they do actually work. These women should be fired
E Zrenner, "[Light-induced damage to the eye]", Fortschr Ophthalmol, 1990;87 Suppl:S41-51. PMID 2083911
Peep V Algvere, John Marshall, Stefan Seregard, "Age-related maculopathy and the impact of blue light hazard", Acta Ophthalmol Scand, 2006 Feb;84(1):4-15. PMID 16445433
Gianluca Tosini, Ian Ferguson & Kazuo Tsubota, "Effects of blue light on the circadian system and eye physiology", Mol Vis, 2016;22: 61-72. PMID 26900325
Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", PLoS One, 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853
Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", Int J Ophthalmol, 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436
Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", Oxid Med Cell Longev, 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186
Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", Biomed Pharmacother, 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817
Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
@@RaoulRamsaran nice sources. The way I did mine was through “The Bates Method”
@@reedyy_4114 do you mean you have been using the Bates method?
Can u tell us what exercises u usually do? I have myopia too
Please dont do any so called "eye exercises" from William Bates.
It will not be beneficial to your underlying problem if there is any. Seek an optometrist for a consulting and an examination.
I had a friend in her '50s with a pretty strong prescription. She did one of those "quack" programs with eye exercises. I totally thought it was silly but she was extremely diligent. I came back to visit her a year later and her prescription was much lighter. I visited a couple of years after that and she only needed glasses for very close stuff. A year later, she didn't need glasses at all--she could both read small print up close and see clearly far away and her astigmatism was gone. I think doctors can't find scientific evidence for eye exercises working because they can't find enough people that are diligent over those timescales. But I totally saw it happen. It's not a myth. I don't know how many people can do 15 or 20 mintues every day for years, though.
.... The myth is that the eye is being restored. Whats happening is you've exercised the muscles that focus the lens in your eye.
Reliance on that can cause eye strain that eye strain can be debilitating over time.
However, sometimes people just get lazy eye muscles and they don't focus normally.
I know, because I suffered through the eye strain.
Anecdotally, eye exercises worked for me too. I've been using Mark Warren's exercises where the idea is to train the muscles that control the lenses in order to relax, since phones and screens make them contract too often.
Another thing that might be useful, especially for people with dry eye like me is to use artificial tears. I used to have difficutly with visual clarity even when my diopters have decreased. It wasn't until medical check up that I found out my eyes were very dry. I've been using it recently and it has become near 20/20 vision, straight from -3. I hope I can improve my vision further
@@obnoxiouscommenter6194 how gradual was the improvement. I have been thinking about my eyesight and if I can improve them naturally, I am willing to try it out
@@tanirikamajumder4512 it'll take months, dropped from -1.5 to about -0.5. Even though the eye focus is much better, I'm still working on my poor visual acuity. I've heard it's more of training the brain to recognize edges
My vision also improved from -2.75 to -1.00 ... it's been 3 years of being 100% dedicated to trying to be positive, not stress etc. So yes, eyesight can improve but it requires a lot of mental focus and most people lack the discipline and energy. I also don't have diabetes anymore even though my doctor said it's incurable..
There is not only one diagnosis that eye exercises can help with - just one diagnosis that insurance companies pay for treatment of. Eye exercises can help both convergence insufficiency and convergence excess, as well as a host of other conditions. It was sad to see the OD sit silent during this section as she did a rotation on visual therapy in optometry school. The MD or DO ophthalmologist likely has never had any training in how visual therapy can help restore function to many individuals. They did hit the main target of letting folks know you cannot exercise away an Rx for glasses beyond + or - 0.50!
Interesting stuff. I'm absolutely blind without my glasses. It doesn't seem like my vision is "blurry" without my glasses (I have astigmatism), but imagine you take a photo [with text] into photoshop, duplicate the layer and set it transparency slightly below the original layer, and move the duplicated layer down about 2 millimeters. Repeat the process two more times with a variation in positioning of the layer (double vision in both eyes). If I focus my looking through both my eyes just right, without my glasses, I can see four lines of the same line of text lmao.
now this is the perfect description for what i see as well! XD
oh, double vision friend! mine is slightly different, but i’m glad to relate to someone here!
The big story I heard since I was young was this: your eyes do not get better, they only get worse. If you're wearing glasses, you may need stronger lenses over the years, but NEVER will you need less correction. Once you start wearing glasses (that you really need), you'll always need glasses or other corrective lenses. This is why cataracts were the best thing that ever happened to me. Before, broken glasses meant expense and a long wait before you could function again (unless you carried spares with you all the time, usually impractical). Then I had cataract surgery with the corrective (toric) implants. Now I go buy a pair of reading glasses for a few dollars and don't even need glasses to drive. If you ever have cataracts (and I hope you don't), opt for the more expensive corrective implants; it's the best money you'll ever spend. Not to mention that you'll be able to wear non-prescription sunglasses (prescription sunglasses are a pain in the ass unless you carry a purse).
Vision can and does get better for a few reasons that I can think of. Young children are often naturally far-sighted because the eye isn't done growing yet and its axial length is shorter than where it will be by the time they are adults. So they may end up needing glasses with a plus Rx, and then with age, as the eye lengthens, the amount of Rx needed to focus the light properly on their retina becomes less and less. A counterintuitive case of vision getting "better" is when people experience the first onset of cataracts, where vision is affected but can still be corrected adequately by glasses. Adding plus power to the person's Rx may bring them to 20/20. So if you have a nearsighted individual who's always rocked a heavy minus Rx, the case could be made that their vision "got better" when they leave the office with a less minus Rx than before. In fact, when older patients remark that "actually, my vision seems to have gotten better somehow!" you can pretty well guess cataracts early in their development are responsible for this temporary bout of perceived good fortune. But the core of your sentiment is definitely true: there is no "magic" to vision or the eyes. If and when there are improvements (or more typically, degradation), there is a clear reason for it.
Good info thanks
@@gaynzz6841 For starters, the entire medical community disagrees with you on that point. Myopia, hyperopia, astigmatism, and all permutations of such, have diagnostic codes just like, say, heart or gastrointestinal diseases.
States vary on the specifics, but in general, at least in the US, it is illegal to sell somebody prescription vision correction without a valid Rx for it. In my state, vision Rx's are valid for, at most, 2 years.
And if these facts aren't enough, try going into your nearest DMV with worse-than-20/40 vision and see if they'll let you leave with an unrestricted driver's license. Not only does the medical community agree that common vision deficiencies are actual bona fide medical conditions, but this fact is also reflected in various systems and institutions that we deal with in our daily lives.
Eye exercises can help relax eye muscles, lead to less eye strain or fatigue, and making you feel less strained.
They do work.
They literally said that in the video 😭 the question was if eye exercises can improve vision which isnt true
They said that in the video. So please wait before commenting.
@@mariam-ch4in it depends on the definition of the word vision. Vision is not just refractive errors.
What is eye excercise??
@mariam-ch4in It does. My parents both decreased their eyesight by -0.5 or -1.
Can you believe we are having all these amazing tips for free even better than so many docs out there. Thanks to these beautiful ladies.
Refreshing to see an Ophthalmologist and Optometrist side-by-side discussing everything they know and learned about the human eye.
My parents left me under the sun as a baby, as a result my eyes were ruined. Thanks mom and dad.
@@fynkozari9271 sheesh
It was refreshing but I feel they could have found a better spoken more articulate OD… the OMD shined thru on this one
Blue light gives me headaches when reading for prolonged periods of time. Before iOS added the feature to the native OS I used to get headaches all the time while reading on my iPad, even at very low brightness and even when changing the background of the 'paper' to grey or brownish/yellowish/beige, which was certainly more comfortable to my eyes than white, but it still hurt. When they added the night vision feature it felt sooo much better. I felt like pressure was relieved from my eyes, literally. I could read for hours without pain. I know they don't completely block blue light but just reducing it helps a lot.
I agree 100 percent
E Zrenner, "[Light-induced damage to the eye]", Fortschr Ophthalmol, 1990;87 Suppl:S41-51. PMID 2083911
Peep V Algvere, John Marshall, Stefan Seregard, "Age-related maculopathy and the impact of blue light hazard", Acta Ophthalmol Scand, 2006 Feb;84(1):4-15. PMID 16445433
Gianluca Tosini, Ian Ferguson & Kazuo Tsubota, "Effects of blue light on the circadian system and eye physiology", Mol Vis, 2016;22: 61-72. PMID 26900325
Javier Vicente-Tejedor, Miguel Marchena, Laura Ramírez, Diego García-Ayuso, Violeta Gómez-Vicente, et al, "Removal of the blue component of light significantly decreases retinal damage after high-intensity exposure", PLoS One, 2018;13(3):e0194218. PMID 29543853
Zhi-Chun Zhao, Ying Zhou, Gang Tan & Juan Li, "Research progress about the effect and prevention of blue light on eyes", Int J Ophthalmol, 2018;11(12):1999-2003. PMID 30588436
Jin-Xin Tao, Wen-Chuan Zhou, Xin-Gen Zhu, "Mitochondria as potential targets and initiators of the blue-light hazard to the retina", Oxid Med Cell Longev, 2019 Aug 21;2019:6435364. PMID 31531186
Xinli Ouyang, Jing Yang, Zexin Hong, Yide Wu, Yongfang Xie & Guohui Wang, "Mechanisms of blue light-induced eye hazard and protective measures: A review", Biomed Pharmacother, 2020 Oct;130:110577. PMID 32763817
Swapnil Thakur, Rohit Dhakal & Pavan K Verkicharla, "Short-term exposure to blue light shows an inhibitory effect on axial elongation in human eyes independent of defocus", Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2021 Dec 1;62(15):22. PMID 34935883
@@nowi5847 sorry for the offtopic but is that venti in your pfp lol
I have chronic migraines and blue light is one of the triggers. For reference, migraines can have different triggers for different people - anything from coffee to sound. Blue light is indeed not dangerous to the eyes as far as we know, but of course that changes if you have a specific eye or neurological problem.
I once had styes in both eyes, so I couldn’t wear my contacts. I was also unlucky enough to have broken glasses at the time. So for a week straight I just could not see.
Yep make sure to have backup glasses because if you ever get an eye infection too you’d be screwed
It was interesting to hear about the blue light. I’ve known for a while it was a myth, so I was pleasantly surprised when I went to get my eyes tested a few days ago and my optician did not recommend it. In fact, looking on their website, I don’t think they even offer it any more. They did recommend glare reduction for my lenses, which I took, but - yeah. Some interesting myths there that I’d never heard of!
My eye doctor, when I last had my eyes checked, didn't recommend blue light filtering, but did mention it as an option as I was - at the time - going to start needing two separate prescriptions for long distance and medium distance (specifically for using the computer as my job at the time had me in front of a computer 9+ hours per day, and I was spending another 3-6 hours per day in front of my computer at home) and suggested getting yellow-tinted lenses for my computer distance glasses, basically as a combination of the tinting helping with my migraines (due to the reduced brightness, and generally being less bothered by 'warmer' light temperatures, not because of any damage from the blue light) and the blue-light reduction helping with my horrible sleeping patterns.
It is certainly good, though, that both eye doctors and more scrupulous opticians are not trying to further the myth that blue light is going to damage your eyes or cause eye strain, as opposed to simply causing some issues to your sleep schedule.
There are MANY conditions for which eye exercises can be beneficial. Of course, not the refractive conditions, but CI is far from the only issue out there that can be improved with Vision Therapy. BV/VT/Vision Rehab is a whole specialty in eyecare. Also, pencil push-ups are not a modern VT exercise, this is dated information.
Absolutely. They are 100% wrong about that!
I've always wondered about the opposite of the 'eyes get more farsighted as you get older'. I was quite farsighted as a child, but now, in my 30's, I'm relatively dependant on contact lenses for near sightedness (-3.0). Always wondered what might have caused this when everyone has always said "You'll get more farsighted as you age".
A new study said it has something to do with insufficient exposure to sunlight, but the research is still going on
@@eyeballpapercut4400 That makes some sense actually! I also have ocular rosacea so my eyes definitely do have insufficient exposure to sunlight too.
Look up presbyopia
My son was diagnosed with Eyeritis at the age of 9. The diagnosis came with some pretty crappy news. The specialist eye doctor said that unfortunately there is no cure, however with steroid drops they can slow the progression and MAYBE he won't go blind in his 40's. At his last eye exam he was told that if he were to go up 1 point he would be declared legally bling. The steroid drops run $650.00 for a 0.85 bottle which lasts 7 days. He's supposed to do 1 drop daily. Without insurance it's impossible to put that kind of money out for 14 drops. Have you got any suggestion on an alternative treatment that we can speak to his eye Dr about? Desperate for help! Thank you
Not a doctor, and this is not medical advice, but while iritis is not "curable," it is certainly treatable. Acute cases can pop up and then go away forever after a course of treatment. Some people experience chronic iritis. Is this a chronic case? At the eye clinic where I work, they most often prescribe Pred Forte, which is a fairly cheap and common ophthalmic steroid drop, available in generic form. Of course, an Rx is still needed for this. The aim is to reduce inflammation and quiet the eye(s) down until the episode passes. I would talk to the doctor and tell them that the price of the medication they've prescribed is prohibitive and ask if they could please prescribe a more affordable alternative. If a steroid is all that's needed, Pred Forte should do the trick.
If your child's case is chronic, my experience suggests a systemic issue possibly requiring intervention by other medical specialists, likely a Rheumatologist. It's not safe to be on steroids for very long periods of time, and other specialists are trained to properly diagnose and treat cases requiring so-called "steroid-sparing drugs" such as Methotrexate. This may be an avenue to discuss with your child's eye doctor.
Not to make light of your situation, but it’s kinda funny how an average person could hear iritis and think it would spelled “eyeritis” because it’s a condition pertaining to your eyes. It does specifically refer to the iris though. Another name is uveitis.
I had floaters all of a sudden in my right eye last January and I was so scared at first, but I was relieved when I knew that floaters are common eye problem and started to settle and live with it. After a 2 weeks the vision in my right eye became so blurry and somewhat distorted. It turns out I had Uveitis (inflammation inside the eye) according t my ophthalmologist. It hasn't fully recovered yet but it my vision became better.
For someone who are experiencing discomfort in your eye/s, or in overall health in general, Please go see a doctor. They are the experts to this field and we should trust them rather than believing in myths from other people.
Fellow uveitis sufferer here! for me it's idiopathic - I've done every test under the sun and the cause is still unknown. What did help me recover though, is a gluten free diet. I have a family history of gluten intolerance that seems to present differently in each family member and I guess for me it's the eyes. Hope this helps! Hang in there! ^^
Wow... this video was very helpful and knowledgeable. Thank you Dr. Banik and Dr. Tsai for such well thought out explanations. Both of you spoke calmly, nicely, very clearly and intelligently like true doctors should.
Snakes and salesmen will always speak nicely and put alot of effort in when they have a degree allowing them to convince you to spend hundreds on eye glasses. An optometrist running to remote areas can net up to 4k in a weekend for "charity work". Let alone their daily work
I remember back in the early 1960s, people were saying that if you roll your eyes around and look up and down, or right and left, at extremes, it would exercise your eyes and reduce (or eliminate) the need for glasses. Even Jack LaLanne advocated eye exercises (the only time I really thought he was wrong about anything).
If you have cone dystrophy, blue light does cause eye strain, and every type of light.
Having coverage is necessary, to protect the eyes.
Is science insider sponsored by Microsoft and Apple? You need humans in all the planet to be exposed to 20+ years MINIMUM at least before you can say something is "safe" or inocuous. Did you people forget that doctors said SMOKING WAS SAFE????
@@chinchillamdgamer you'd be surprised on how many people would believe in things sponsored by companies, that sadly arent true.
I always were sunglasses when driving in the summertime because I am light sensitive and also minimise the risk of getting blinded by glare and such on the road.
I am also *super* sensitive to that. People always think I would exaggerate, but sun glare really is in my top 5 list of things I really hate.
on most devices there is usually a feature somewhere in the settings where you could decrease the amount of blue light. you can even choose what time of the day you want to enable it. i use it on my phone at night before i sleep.
The information about Vision Therapy is partially true, VT doesn't improve Visual Acuity.
What it does is it can give relief from asthenopic symptoms (headaches, eye strain etc)..
However, push up is now proven to be LESS EFFECTIVE compared to VT with Life Saver cards, Eccentric circles, Brock string and many more...
On top of that Accommodation can be trained with Accommodation flippers, hart charts etc...
So yeah, people DO NEED VISION THERAPY.
To have a HEALTHY VISION.
THANK YOU 🙌🙌
Like the doctors said, It depends on what your actual condition is. You are right in that it doesn't necessarily help with acuity but more so helps with accommodation and/or a "lazy eye".
You are also correct in that pencil pushups are not as effective as other newer methods...
Yeah...she only mentioned CI as the "only" condition. So many others that VT can help with.
I'm surprised you guys didn't mention how diet can affect people's vision. Near the end you did mention that inflammation can cause blurry vision, but for anybody like me who has an inflammatory condition... FYI: you can reverse your eye problems with an anti-inflammatory diet!!!
I was absolutely shocked when my glasses stopped working and I went to the eye doctor assuming I needed a stronger prescription and she actually reduced my prescription! MY EYES GOT BETTER 👏
That's because it can't in healthy people. Unless you have Behcets or any actual inflammatory condition (arthritis, spondylitis, etc...) Then yes, your vision can, stop getting worse. But eyes do not regenerate like that... Also, bad diets in diabetes cause blindness too but you gotta be unhealthy for diet to affect you like that, even greatly obese are not affected with trash diets
What anti-inflammatory diet did you take?
Uh???
I don’t believe that.
If this was the truth then nobody would have bad vision.
@@abigray8585 well it definitely worked on me and according to my eye doctor and anti-inflammatory diet can 100% reverse and inflammatory eye condition. And then I came home and I googled it and I did see many references to it on the internet.
@@abigray8585 not everyone eats right
Okay maybe Bluelight isn't damaging but they should really add another point that you shouldn't use phone/bluelight gadget in the dark. This really causes eye strain and dryness. It causes the eye muscles to be be stuck in the "near vision" state which causes Myopia. While addressing such myths, it's very important to give the complete information because people may think that bluelight isn't damaging and start using phones while in bed, working on computers in the dark, etc. These things really damage out eyesight and it is a very important point to be covered here.
100% exactly what happened to me. Because of what this video said about bluelight I started looking at my phone in bed in the dark for 1 hour nightly until I started experiencing constant eye pain even seeing light flashes every day & night. Eyes blurry & burning daily that I regretted it deeply.
Smoothest voice to learn from. And it’s so easy to believe you guys because there wasn’t any pauses, no “uhm” or “You know”. A lot of confidence in what you guys are teaching us. Go girls!
Not questiong their competence, but the lack of "uhms" etc. is thanks to the video editor. There's constant video cuts/punch ins (1-4 seconds) and if you know what to listen for you can hear an even higher rate of sound cuts, where they've tightened it up.
I grew up in the 1960's, and the myth about sneezing your eyes out was around even then.
On the topic of blue light filters, there is an extremely small amount of people who will literally get severe headaches from using them. Yes, USING blue light filters can give you more headaches than not using them. I know this because I am one of them, and I've been googling about this for over 4 years and did not find anything until only a year ago where the first mention of this was a reddit thread where like a handful of people said they have the same issue.
So if youve noticed youve started getting weird headaches, try turning off your blue light filter and wait for a few days to see if they disappear.
Blue light is stimulating, that's what the dimmer on your phone is for. Morning light is blue, it wakes you up, and in the evening, it's red, getting you relaxed for sleep.
I had an eye surgery recently and feel a mayor recession on my left eye. I feel it unstable, I thought the fatigue from looking into screens with close range vision and blue light ruined my surgery (hearing the second didnt relieves me a bit). I'm going to have a consultation soon. But I would like to hear an optometrist here too.
Along with the eye color thing, we've been led partially astray by Mendelian genetics. The real story is more complex and apparently Mendel just didn't include samples that were contradictory to his theory
My eye doctor did try to have me do exercises, but not for the eye, but to try and get the muscles behind it in line. After a while they said that it wouldnt work and I got my eye muscles surgically corrected.
I’ve had a long journey of eye issues with my left eye. Specifically when I was 5 I had surgery to help improve my muscles in my left eye because they were weak. I was born with something called strabismus. I did eye exercises for a while to improve the muscles, and I wore glasses for like 12 years and felt like my vision was perfect around 9th grade. Then a year or two ago I start noticing lots of strain and now my left eye is very blurry. It’s odd, because I went to two ophthalmologists and they both basically said there is no solution, and that glasses will kind of help but my left eye will always see things this way.
I hate that I went through all of that just to get to this point where I’m wearing glasses that help just a bit, but it’s not clear at all in my left eye. It’s disappointing to say the least. It could be worse but I find it very hard to believe that there are people who have severe astigmatisms in both eyes and wear glasses to see clearly but I can’t see clearly out of my left eye with any prescriptions.
I completely corrected my strabismus and no longer have an eye turn due to exercises (in vision therapy) it 100% works...
@@kymberlidyer7282 the ophthalmologist I went to said that eye exercises wouldn’t help for me, but I have trouble believing that to be true. Maybe I’ll do that and see how it goes
Here's some base ideology I follow when it comes to my eyesight. I don't know if you do or don't do any of these, but I'm an FPS veteran who competes at the highest levels and needs eyesight.
When my eyesights blurry, I do a few things. First is hydration, I want to make sure my cells have enough water to retain flexibility. Secondly, eye exercises, which you said you tried. Third, I think substances like sugar can cause "stickyness" or other issues within the eye (I'm not a doctor, I just know that diabetes can affect the eye and this is the best explanation I can think of) so I avoid sugar largely and then it helps too.
I’ve also heard that most people will eventually experience Glaucoma in their elder years due to how it’s also a condition that very commonly occurs with old age.
Bullshit
@@vwupr
Pretty much I remember a government road safety PSA campaign from a few years ago that was focused on that problem! It’s still possible it might be not the most accurate if further scientific developments on the topic have been made since the campaign was first released.
You are probably mixing up glaucoma with cataract. Glaucoma isn't super rare, but it's a mostly hereditary disease that affect far from most people. Cataract is a condition caused by the natural aging of the lens, and that will affect everyone if they live long enough.
@@IlIlIlIlIlIlIllIlIII
Yeah even my own grandmother had cataracts that she was luckily able to get removed through laser eye surgery a couple of years ago! :)
What's wierd about floaters is that I've actually had it when I was a kid, yet it dissapeared more and more as I grew older (I'm currently 22). Anyone can provide insight on it?
I got eye floaters when I was 17.. Now I am 22 and still have them..
I use to see those all the time as a kid too. Now that I'm older, I don't see them much anymore
Apprentice optician here. From what I've learned: Floaters are usually debris from within the eye flying around in this jelly-like substance called the Vitreous Humor, which holds the eyeball shape mostly. Debris usually gets trapped in that area because the VH is quite thick so the debris can not really find a way to drain itself out and just floats around(most likely that's how the name originated). Considering the age in which the floaters has occurred, the eyes develop over time and presumably swept the debris somewhere outside of your central and peripheral vision. Usually floaters are still in the eye somewhere if no surgical operations were done, perhaps in the blind spot and additional the brain can act to ignore any minute trace of the floaters as much as possible usually by filling in the area with the background more or less, however everyone experiences differently. Not all eye floaters are too detrimental, so the brain practically says whatever to non life-threating floaters. Mostly if the frequency of floaters progresses and what causes the floaters is severe- that's where the medical professional will step in. I hoped I have helped to some extent, typing online is a bit limited with explanations and I'm giving a macro-opinion on the situation. Good to hear it's not bothering you
@@lepark724 Thanks for the detailed explanation!
not a problem, glad I can help!
I once got a wicked eye infection because I left my lenses in water overnight and then didn't wash my hands before putting them back in. I know I was an idiot. Thankfully my eyes recovered but it took years. I almost went blind and I'm at high risk of further issues as I age.
Never let your contactlenses come in contact with water. There is a parasite called acanthamoeba in water from your sink which can cause severe damage to your cornea and corneal scarring because it like to burrow deep in your cornea. Treatment is very painful because you get very strong eye drops multiple times a day to kill it.
@@rickyto2106 yer I know I was dumb. Never again
Water??
Your not supposed to use water.
But sorry that happened to you.
@@abigray8585 yer you're only meant to use the special lenses solution not water. I knew this but didn't have any on had because I went on a unexpected weekend bender
Dry Eye can also occur as a symptom of pollen/animal allergies based on my experiences.
I had 20/15 vision until last year. My vision was worse during my last two pregnancies. It didn't return to normal after my last baby! So now I only have 20/20 vision. I do wear glasses at night time for driving to get me back to my beloved better than "perfect" 20/15 vision.
Eyes exercises DO help and we have a ton of evidence for that. Since 2008 studies have shown that they can help with presbyopia(because the muscles are trained you can keep focus), myophia(after months the eyes shrinks because it wants to keep a relaxed position), Hyperopia(same reason it happens for myophia the eye shinks because it wants keep a relaxed position). As far as I know those 3 conditions are the only 3 that eyes exercises help. Also if you use a crutch because you hurt your ankle it is fine it won't make it worse but if after it gets better you keep using the muscle will deteriorate because of lack of use and it will get worse over-time(that's not a good analogy for glasses because using always helps).
There are different muscles in and around the eye. The ones that we can voluntarily control are around the eyes & the ones we can't control are inside. Those inside are responsible for focusing a near object by changing the shape of the lens & amount of light entering inside, a process called as accommodation. This accommodation falters with age because of progressive weakening of this muscle & reduced flexibility of the lens. So, the pencil push ups mentioned in this video can help a little bit for delaying presbyopia, but cannot help in myopia or hypermetropia.
@@nachiketpargaonkar8646 Actually the exercise that helps with those 3 conditions trains the muscles INSIDE the eye the ones you can't directly control. Basically you pick 2 distances 1 where you have perfect vision and another where you almost have perfect vision. You put any object on the area where you have "perfect" vision just so you can focus your vision on that point(that way you use the muscles without controling them) and on the other point (slightly far if you have myophia, slightly closer if you have hyperopia), you have 2 options:
Option 1 you need something to read.
Option 2 you need something that moves so your eye can track it.
The exercise:
You focus for 30s on the point you have perfect vision than read or follow the object for 10 minuts and repeats that for at least 30 minutes and 2h at most(there are no improviments after 2h and you get diminishing returns after 40 minutes). Those exercises were derived from the pencil push ups that why they look similar. Also, they don't miracles either basically you waste at least half an hour of your day everday and you can expect a 0.5~~2 for every year(if they were stable before) and 0~~3 if they were not(they won't keep getting worse if were not stable and can even improve faster for some reason that we don't know it is speculated age). Another curious thing is those exercises can improve your vision beyond 20/20 range with the help of lenses but on the studies this generally caused light sensitivity problems for some reason.
@@nicholasfigueiredo3171 I'm still skeptical about this method, since the visual acuity which we test our distant vision is measured with the reading chart at a distance of 20 feet/6 metres, a distance where accommodation (action of the ciliary muscle that is inside the eye) is totally relaxed, so you can't really go beyond that by any exercise. Also I haven't read about any such exercise helping in visual acuity in any of the ophthalmology books.
Unless there's a link, I'd wager that the "studies" either came from the land of imagination or were selectively misinterpreted.
@@1515雨天 I agree
In high school I was diagnosed with visual convergence excess. My eye doctor gave me progressive bifocals and a computer program of eye excercises.
What computer program and did it help?
@@fia6559 I dont remember what our was called. This was 12+ years ago. But it came with 3D glasses and I had to watch moving boxes and indicate when then converged. It did help.
Yeah, those eye exercises do help for binocular vision and accommodative issues. I wish they would have addressed that they weren’t talking on behalf of those but rather the “eye exercises” people think they can do to reverse their glasses prescriptions.
My vision improved after watching this, you girls are hooot!
Nice to see so much diversity in these series of vids! Well done Doctors . . . and such awesome smiles are a bonus! Lol
This is actually such a reassuring video. I have myopia, and I worry about it getting worse, but it's fascinating to hear it may actually reverse! And i always get sun protection coating on my glasses lol