Minercar
LargeDreamsSmallCapital
You better have a check for detached retina.
I wish I was in 6th grade!!!!!!!!!!!! Until that happens I can at least act like a 6th grader????Young at heart, my friend
It's critical that you have yourself checked for a detatched retina immediately. If that is not the cause, I can tell you quite a bit about floaters. PM me if you like."About" when I was 50 started having some problem with eye "floaters." Little ones, come and go
Yesterday I stepped outside, and did "nothing" and "just like that" a HUGE floater appeared. Today it is wandering around right in my "eye level." VERY annoying. And, at my age, this could be "something"
I won't make it to the eyes people today, have to be Mon-Tues.
Doc also recommend I use eye drops "a lot more often."When I was around 60 I used to see floaters when I walked up (100 feet) from my shop to house. I light up my shop like a NASA launch pad. In the country at my house it’s very dark and my door light is back in a corner so there wasn’t much lighting. My eye doctor said my eyes were very dry and I was getting caderacs (bad spelling) but recommended getting some good eye drops. 5 plus years (65) later my eyes are still 20/20 and I use drops when I remember. I honestly haven’t noticed the floaters lately.
I just had cataract surgery done on my left eye in June. Its an amazing difference. Its like looking at the world with a 100 watt bulb while my right eye everything looks kinda yellow. Dr said my right eye will need surgery in the future but not just yet.Well I'm back from the eye doc, and about 500 bucks lighter. Ordered new glasses, which are paid for, and the doc assures me that the floater is "pretty safe" and thinks it will likely break up over time. He says I am showing signs of cataracts in both eyes, which is a "new deal," as last go around I was pronounced "clean."
They ran several tests, the retina photo thing, pressure, whatever that roving hell-of-a-bright light is, it all seems pretty thorough. No glocoma, no degeneration, retina detachment, other than the oncoming cataract thing, he say's "I'm good."
I don't drive at night on two lane highways mostly because of glare. Been that way for me 15 years at least. I can handle freeways n' suchGlad to hear that Del !
I had cataracts so bad I couldn't drive at night as all headlights just wiped out my vision til they passed.
I had artificial lens installed when they took care of the cataracts. I now have 20-20 vision without glasses !
Not an Optometrist but an Ophthalmologist!Off topic a little and I wish I remembered the name of the procedure but our eyes have a vent hole. Some of us as we age have a condition where the vent hole starts to close up. I’m one of those guys and luckily I changed my bad habit of not going to an eye Doctor for yearly checkups. These vent holes keep the pressure from building in your eyes and if they close up you could go blind in a short amount of time. She sent me to a specialist and he confirmed what she saw. A week later my right eye was getting a laser treatment. A week after that my left eye was done. Don’t neglect seeing a good eye Doctor guys and girls.
Those lightning bolts are called Vitreous Detachment. The vitreous of the eye is shrinking and pulling away from the retina. It comes with age. When it finally breaks free, the lightning bolts disappear until the next one happens. The detachment sometimes causes floaters. That was from my Ophthalmologist when I was experiencing them a few years back.I don't mind floaters cuz they come and go, and so far, are easily blinked away. But the lightning bolts I used to get for no reason, that I could not even tell from which eye they originated (which persisted with eyes closed even), those scared me. But that was a long time ago. At 68ish now, I haven't seen any for several/many years. And I no longer wear corrective lenses, my eyes are now the best they have ever been since puberty. No doctors for me, you know my story.....Thank YHWH.