I have never been able to cross my eyes. Even as a baby, I couldn't see my nose. I also can't track moving objects without having to concentrate with all my might. I have always had wiggling or sliding double vision. It took years of going to specialists in the 70's and early 80's before we finally found an eye doctor who knew about it and prescribed eye exercises and glasses for me. Those exercises were so hard for me to do, but they did work in helping me to control my double vision as long as I concentrated. Now, I have Hyperparathyroidism and it is making my diplopia worse again. Even doing my exercises isn't helping. My eye doctor I have now is trying stronger prisms on my glasses, but it doesn't help much. The nerves in my eye muscles and/or my neurons in my brain are probably getting messed up by this condition. That's something that people seldom think about when it comes to vision problems: that a condition or illness could be causing it.
I'm a bit of a weird case. My eyes don't look misaligned (no visible strabismus from looking at pictures of me, or at least it's not obvious), but in certain angles I have to close one eye to see correctly. For instance, when I'm shaving and looking at the mirror, when I turn my head to the right and try to look left I always have to close my right eye to avoid double vision. But when it's the reverse (turning my head to the left and looking right) I don't have that problem. In other situations, though, it's more the left eye that I tend to close a bit. Such as when looking at my laptop, I generally lay down to the left (not sure how to describe it better, English isn't my first language) and avoid double vision by kind of holding the cheek near my left eye, which seems to balance my vision. And the double vision definitely gets worse at close range, when looking at screens, or when my eyes are tired. Independently (when the other eye is closed), though, I can turn either eye in any direction (upwards, downards, inwards, outwards) without any double vision. Does that mean it's likely more of a coordination problem than a problem with either eye? Convergence insufficiency looks a lot like what I have, but what bugs me is the asymmetry (the double vision tends to be worse when looking to the left), which is never described as a symptom of convergence insufficiency from what I've gathered. Would love to know your thoughts.
@@rod6722 hi there, this comment just popped up on our end on TH-cam. If you still need help we advise a consultation to discuss the specifics of your case as there seems to be multiple things occurring. Visit us at www.visionforlifeworks.com to schedule one if you wish to do so. Thanks for being here.
I am healed now after going through 3 weeks of HYDROCORTISONE TABLETS therapy, my diplopia is completely gone. You may want to go to your Medical Doctor and see if he or she thinks Steroid therapy could help you too. A prescription is required. I tried prism lenses, and they didn't work for me. I think they were possibly made wrong according to my Optometrist that I got another opinion from, but I'm sure if they are made correctly, they could be of much benefit.
I did a crosslinking treatment to right eye because of keratoconus .and now i feel like i have double vision on that eyee..its like sometimes i see two moons in sky,see four eyes on someones facee..but not all the timee..doctor can you pls tell me is it okey to have double vision after crosslinkin?btw i faced the crosslinking surgery before like eight weeks
@@PoggersFloppa But the thing is that .when you close one of your eye and if the double vision changes to single vision( which I have ) then it means the problem is not with the eye but with the nerves. But MRI should detect any abnormalities in the neurological system .So it is confusing for me..
Have your parents contact us. We can help you with this! Please visit our website and fill out the Quality of Life Questionnaire on the home page, then one of our therapists will be in touch! www.visionforlifeworks.com Or, you can can schedule a consultation for $149 by clicking the link below: visiont.kartra.com/page/PxT101?fbclid=IwAR3n6NODZP5a4bYNFhi34J9bIRFT1Ir2JEt_EMeAGWYU0e_nMwB6rCJ35yY
@@visontherapy i was a gamer and like this guy who commented the moon is like shining on top like its doubled and can i heal it if i stop watching screen and eating vegetables pls im thinking about everything now i dont know what to do
I have never been able to cross my eyes. Even as a baby, I couldn't see my nose. I also can't track moving objects without having to concentrate with all my might. I have always had wiggling or sliding double vision.
It took years of going to specialists in the 70's and early 80's before we finally found an eye doctor who knew about it and prescribed eye exercises and glasses for me. Those exercises were so hard for me to do, but they did work in helping me to control my double vision as long as I concentrated.
Now, I have Hyperparathyroidism and it is making my diplopia worse again. Even doing my exercises isn't helping. My eye doctor I have now is trying stronger prisms on my glasses, but it doesn't help much. The nerves in my eye muscles and/or my neurons in my brain are probably getting messed up by this condition.
That's something that people seldom think about when it comes to vision problems: that a condition or illness could be causing it.
Is this a pre-stroke condition
Why do some people get double vision from cataract surgery? Can it be fixed?
I'm a bit of a weird case. My eyes don't look misaligned (no visible strabismus from looking at pictures of me, or at least it's not obvious), but in certain angles I have to close one eye to see correctly. For instance, when I'm shaving and looking at the mirror, when I turn my head to the right and try to look left I always have to close my right eye to avoid double vision. But when it's the reverse (turning my head to the left and looking right) I don't have that problem. In other situations, though, it's more the left eye that I tend to close a bit. Such as when looking at my laptop, I generally lay down to the left (not sure how to describe it better, English isn't my first language) and avoid double vision by kind of holding the cheek near my left eye, which seems to balance my vision.
And the double vision definitely gets worse at close range, when looking at screens, or when my eyes are tired. Independently (when the other eye is closed), though, I can turn either eye in any direction (upwards, downards, inwards, outwards) without any double vision. Does that mean it's likely more of a coordination problem than a problem with either eye? Convergence insufficiency looks a lot like what I have, but what bugs me is the asymmetry (the double vision tends to be worse when looking to the left), which is never described as a symptom of convergence insufficiency from what I've gathered. Would love to know your thoughts.
@@rod6722 hi there, this comment just popped up on our end on TH-cam. If you still need help we advise a consultation to discuss the specifics of your case as there seems to be multiple things occurring. Visit us at www.visionforlifeworks.com to schedule one if you wish to do so. Thanks for being here.
I am healed now after going through 3 weeks of HYDROCORTISONE TABLETS therapy, my diplopia is completely gone. You may want to go to your Medical Doctor and see if he or she thinks Steroid therapy could help you too. A prescription is required.
I tried prism lenses, and they didn't work for me. I think they were possibly made wrong according to my Optometrist that I got another opinion from, but I'm sure if they are made correctly, they could be of much benefit.
I did a crosslinking treatment to right eye because of keratoconus .and now i feel like i have double vision on that eyee..its like sometimes i see two moons in sky,see four eyes on someones facee..but not all the timee..doctor can you pls tell me is it okey to have double vision after crosslinkin?btw i faced the crosslinking surgery before like eight weeks
How do I contact you?
Hi Sheila, you can do so by visiting us at www.visionforlifeworks.com!
i can control my double vision whenever i want, it feels good.
Congratulations! Then the question is if you can control it, why still have it at all?
@@visontherapy i do not know i just do it for fun
@@PoggersFloppa I also have the same problem..MRI normal..what might be the cause ?
@@Versatileabhi i have no idea, maybe lazy eye because sometimes the eye isnt trained enough. the normal eye i view in is my right eye so yeah.
@@PoggersFloppa But the thing is that .when you close one of your eye and if the double vision changes to single vision( which I have ) then it means the problem is not with the eye but with the nerves. But MRI should detect any abnormalities in the neurological system .So it is confusing for me..
Strabismus is treated with oriental medicine without the need for surgical intervention
The T is silent in often.
It is pronounced if you are raised in a place where the dialect pronounces it.
When I’m looking at the moon at night it’s looks double cause the night is black
Also it’s not that noticeable in irl i always notice it when I’m looking at a screen
I’m seeing vertical vision
In irl it looks worse if it’s far away
Have your parents contact us. We can help you with this! Please visit our website and fill out the Quality of Life Questionnaire on the home page, then one of our therapists will be in touch! www.visionforlifeworks.com
Or, you can can schedule a consultation for $149 by clicking the link below:
visiont.kartra.com/page/PxT101?fbclid=IwAR3n6NODZP5a4bYNFhi34J9bIRFT1Ir2JEt_EMeAGWYU0e_nMwB6rCJ35yY
@@visontherapy i was a gamer and like this guy who commented the moon is like shining on top like its doubled and can i heal it if i stop watching screen and eating vegetables pls im thinking about everything now i dont know what to do