color blindness night blindness snow blindness
Protanope andDeutanope
No - colour-blindness is the inability of the brain to interpret correctly colours that the eyes see, or maybe the eyes have a defect in their structure that sends the wrong signals to the brain. Blindness (total?) is when the eyes are unable to send visual signals to the brain at all. Maybe the optic nerve is damaged, or the eyes themselves are damaged - there are various medical reasons for the cause of blindness.
yes some types of blindness can be recovered. it depends on what type of blindness it is.
Color blindness is due to dysfunctional cone type cells in the retina of the eye.
Individuals with color blindness often have a normal male karyotype (46,XY) or female karyotype (46,XX). The genetic basis for color blindness typically involves mutations in genes located on the X chromosome, leading to different types of color vision deficiencies.
there are 1000005000 kinds of blindnesses
near sighted, far sighted, cataracts, glaucoma, blindness
No colour blindness does not affect a certain age group it can affect anyone but usually you are born with colour blindness its not like usually as you grow older you go blind its completely different
Depends on the condition. Some types can be fixed by surgery, or can fix themselves over time
Generally, no. Some types of color blindness are OK for general aviation, but red-green color blindness is almost always a disqualification, because the wingtip lights are red and green.
Blindness can be caused by a variety of genetic diseases, such as retinitis pigmentosa, Leber congenital amaurosis, and glaucoma. These conditions can be inherited in different patterns, such as autosomal recessive, autosomal dominant, or X-linked. Genetic testing can help identify the specific genetic cause of blindness in an individual.
We can't be certain. It is propable, but he is no different from his siblings excluding his blindness.