Whenever I look at white text on a black background (but not the inverse) SOME of the text gets blurry or pixelated and sorta jiggle. This does not happen if I cover one eye so it must have something to do with their alignment or perhaps one optic nerve is slower than the other? I also see the white blood cells in my eyes if I look at something white (not just the sky like most people with the blue field entoptic phenomenon), also floaters. Also if I look at something with a fine pattern like a carpet I see static over it, strangely enough, unlike the first thing I mentioned; the static gets amplified if I cover one eye...
Whenever I look at white text on a black background (but not the inverse) SOME of the text gets blurry or pixelated and sorta jiggle. This does not happen if I cover one eye so it must have something to do with their alignment or perhaps one optic nerve is slower than the other? I also see the white blood cells in my eyes if I look at something white (not just the sky like most people with the blue field entoptic phenomenon), also floaters. Also if I look at something with a fine pattern like a carpet I see static over it, strangely enough, unlike the first thing I mentioned; the static gets amplified if I cover one eye...
Do AC/A ratio change with convergence insufficiency?
Why myopes develop convergence insufficiency and exophoria more than other refractive errors???
I am 25 years old and I have both, I can't read without turning head left to right when I walk through lines with my eyes
@@claudio1418 really? i have CI but i've never experienced that. neither have my parents
myopes have decreased accomodative demand so decreased accomodative convergence & hence exophoria & CI.