What Is Progressive Myopia?
Myopia, or nearsightedness, is a refractive error that causes blurred distance vision. It occurs when the eyeball grows too long, causing light to focus in front of the retina instead of directly on it.
Progressive myopia is nearsightedness that worsens each year, requiring a significant increase in vision correction of at least half a diopter.
Myopia progression is a rising concern among eyecare professionals because there is overwhelming scientific evidence that high levels of myopia are a risk factor for serious eye diseases in the future, such as glaucoma, cataracts, retinal detachment and myopic macular degeneration. Is your child's prescription rapidly changing? If so, contact Rosen Optometry Inc. in St. Louis. We offer myopia management, which can help slow down or even halt rapidly progressing myopia.
Why Are Glasses Not A Solution?
For decades, distance vision glasses have been prescribed to nearsighted patients to correct myopia, but according to the latest research, they may actually cause myopia to worsen.
Glasses correct distance vision by manipulating the way light is focused onto the retina. However, glasses only offer clearer central vision but don’t address images in the peripheral visual field. To compensate for this blurred peripheral vision, the retina actually stretches out in length — rendering the eye more nearsighted and exacerbating the underlying cause of worsening myopia.
What Is Myopia Management?
Myopia management is a specialized, scientifically proven program that slows or halts myopia progression in children and young adults.
If your child’s myopia has been rapidly increasing each year, myopia management can help slow it down or even halt its progression.
At Rosen Optometry Inc., we will assess your child’s eyes and vision and discuss the best myopia management strategy that will be most effective in controlling your child’s myopia progression.
To schedule your child’s myopia consultation, contact Rosen Optometry Inc. in St. Louis today!
Our practice serves patients from St. Louis, Byrnes Mill, Cedar Hill, and Imperial, Missouri and surrounding communities.
Q: #1: How does myopia affect a child?
- A: A child with uncorrected myopia will typically experience eyestrain as they attempt to focus on faraway objects to see them more clearly. Other symptoms include headaches, tired and itchy eyes, blurred vision, and neck and shoulder pain.
Q: #2: Why are glasses not a treatment for progressive myopia?
- A: While glasses correct progressive nearsightedness through ever-stronger prescriptions, they don’t treat the underlying problem: the elongated shape of the eye.