Do Lazy-Eye Treatments Really Work?

Photo Credit: Bill Lloyd
Here's why many children develop lazy eye:
- The refractive error between the two eyes may be significantly different
- The eyes may be crooked
- Something is blocking focused light rays from reaching the retina (like a juvenile cataract)
Click here to read a more detailed post about amblyopia.
True to its name, lazy eye appears to be, well, lazy! So long as the child is being treated (whether with patching or atropine eyedrops) vision recovery is steady and predictable. The problems come when the treatment stops. New research about lazy eye shows that most 10 year-olds previously treated for their amblyopia still have a residual vision deficit.
This national study followed 176 children with moderate amblyopia from the time of diagnosis until age 10. The average age at enrollment was 5 (even though their lazy eye had likely been present for years). As predicted, children whose treatment was initiated before age 5 fared much better than latecomers who enrolled after their fifth birthday. Young brains are more 'plastic', more responsive to amblyopia treatment. The earlier the lazy eye is treated the greater the effect of treatment and the more time is available to reverse the problem. Sometime around age 7 years the brain 'hardens' and becomes less responsive to lazy eye treatment.
Here's what they found when they analyzed the entire group at age 10:
- Most of the vision improvement from earlier amblyopia treatment was maintained
- Some residual lazy eye persists in most treated children
- Patching and atropine eyedrops achieve similar benefits
- Earlier treatment results in better the long-term visual outcome
- Most children received no treatment beyond age 9
Most of these children continued to wear prescribed eyeglasses. Remember, parents, every case is different and all children respond differently to lazy eye treatment. The key take home message is that early diagnosis and treatment of amblyopia offer the best opportunity to recover lost eyesight. If treatment fails go back and try again because time is on your side.
REFERENCE: Archives of Ophthalmology, August 2008, pages 1039-1044.
Related Topics: Technorati Tags: amblyopia, lazy eye, children, vision


5 Comments:
I am 56 years old and I have 2 lazy eyes. The vision itself is not the only symptom. It also causes the eye to turn outward. I used patches when I was a child and they did not help with the vision, I also wore glasses with priszoms on the outer edge (which the doctors thought would help to hold me eye straight), they didn't help. I had surgery when I was 20, they went in between the mucus covering of the eye and the eye ball itself, cut the muscle off and re-attached it farther back. This helped some on the turning of the eye outward. I was given glasses throughout my adult life, but since I had one eye nearsighted and one eye farsighted, they just couldn't get them to work right. I lost the ability to drive at night because of this (I had no depth perseption)so I decided to see about Lasik surgerty. I found a doctor that was so good that he did the surgery and now my vision is great in both eyes. They do still turn out from time to time, especially when I'm tired, but I have very good control over it and unless I'm tired or I let them go out (to show someone) they both hold together. This can be an inherited problem. My mom had one lazy eye, I just happened to be born with two lazy eyes.
My son had Ambliopha & strabmisus
His eye was patched for several years.
He is now 32yrs old & a Capt. in the Army leading a tank troop.
He has 2 masters degrees & reads constantly
From my point I have to say it was worth it. Nona Judy
I am about to be 34 and I have a lazy eye. I have had it since I was young but never got any treatment because my mother's mentally I'll and she couldn't care for herself, or a child for that matter. I have always been made fun of for this, even the ones I love. When the father of my children abused me and left me he and his family made fun of that, even when we were together. My daughters even did it too. Now I am an adult and I know I can't afford the surgery. No one cares about a Medicaid recipient. I wish there was a way to correct this and my vision. Anyway, it felt better to get this off my chest.
My 24 year old daughter was diagnosed with Amblyopia and Strabismus at age 2. She was prescribed bifocals with the lower part very strong, thus forcing her to use her eye muscles to read through the top portion of the glasses. She now wears contacts, and occasionally regular (not bifocal) glasses. And she graduated magnu cum laude from college!
Yes they do work if you follow them and make sure your child patches. My son was able to patch and I am very thankful that we found his problem at 2yo.
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