My son has congenital glaucoma and had surgery at 3 months old.
He is 4 years old now and has 20/25 vision in both eyes. Most importantly, he has no optic nerve damage and his pressures have been normal this whole time.
I believe if the problem is caught in time, 20/20 vision is certainly possible, if not very close to possible.
The same person as if they were not wearing spectacles. Spectacles are worn to correct vision disorders.
2008
A person with glasses uses binoculars or a telescope in exactly the same way a person with normal vision does.
The two numbers are a ratio, known as the Snellen Ratio. The bottom number is the distance someone with normal vision can distinguish a reference. The top number is the distance the person being tested can distinguish that same reference. Therefore, 30/30 is the same as 20/20 (the usual way of saying someone has normal vision).
They appear exactly the same as they would to any other person with twenty twenty vision.
Glaucoma can be treated, and the sooner the better. The damage that has already occurred from glaucoma cannot be repaired-it will either stay the same or get worse. Catching glaucoma at its earliest stages and treating it promptly will increase the odds of keeping one's vision.All of the various glaucoma treatments and procedures are aimed at reducing eye pressure. Eye pressure doesn't necessarily cause glaucoma, but once it develops, eye pressure speeds up the destructive process.There are a number of different treatments for glaucoma:Eye dropsoral medicationSurgery
No: peripheral vision is the vision you are not really aware of, that is the bits around the edges of your vision. Binocular vision is using two eyes together to focus on an object in front of you.
No, they are different.
There is no vision score of 40/40. Vision is scored on the distance a person can see in feet. A vision score of 20/20 would be considered perfect sight.
Their vision is almost the same but, the wolf can see better.
No it isn't.
Same vision?