Certain types of blindness, such as those caused by irreversible damage to the optic nerve or advanced retinal diseases like retinitis pigmentosa or age-related macular degeneration, are generally not curable. Additionally, congenital conditions like anophthalmia, where the eyes are absent from birth, cannot be treated to restore vision. In these cases, while some interventions may help manage symptoms or improve quality of life, full restoration of vision is not possible.
Colour (color) blindness is genetic and is not curable.-- The question asks whether red-green color blindness is treatable, not curable.
Colour (color) blindness is genetic and is not curable.-- The question asks whether red-green color blindness is treatable, not curable.
It depends on the cause of course, but two readily curable causes of blindness are cataracts - a simple operation night blindness - lots and lots of beta-carotene. More serious Diabetes - curable with insulin but that's a bit expensive for a horse.
There have been some recent developments that indicate that it may be curable. Scientist have recently found gene therapy that cures colorblindness in monkeys.
Color blindness that is inherited is present in both eyes and remains constant over an individual's entire life. Some cases of acquired color vision loss are not severe, may appear in only one eye, and last for only a short time.
This is a curable condition.Unfortunately, death is not curable.
The first sign of Vitamin A deficiency is night blindness. Severe Vitamin A deficiency can cause Xerophthalmia (dry eye in which the eyes cannot produce tears) and complete blindness.
Arthritis is not curable. However, there are effective treatments available.
If something is not curable it is incurable.
no, polio is not curable, it is preventable
Meibomitis is not curable, but it is treatable.
incurable