Product Description
What is amblyopia?
Other Names: "Lazy eye"
The brain and the eye work together to produce vision. Light enters the eyes and is changed into nerve signals that travel along the optic nerve to the brain. Amblyopia is the medical term used when the vision in one of the eyes is reduced because the eye and the brain are not working together properly. The eye itself looks normal, but it is not being used normally because the brain is favoring the other eye. This condition is also sometimes called lazy eye.
It took me about 25 years to figure out what was happening to my vision because of amblyopia. During this time of intense affliction and pain I learned how amblyopia affected me and how it worked. I also discovered by trial and error how to correct it and live symptom free.
It should be remembered, that amblyopia causes more visual loss in the under 40 group than all the injuries, and diseases combined in this age group.
If you know any one who suffers from amblyopia, you would be doing him or her a favor by telling them about this book. If you have a child or know of a child who has amblyopia you might want to read this book to prepare yourself for some of the problems he or she will have as they develop acute amblyopia.
Amblyopia is the most common cause of decreased vision in children. The condition affects approximately 2 or 3 out of every 100 children. It is estimated that as many as three percent of children in the U.S. have some degree of vision impairment due to amblyopia. Unless it is successfully treated in early childhood, amblyopia usually persists into adulthood, and is the most common cause of monocular (one eye) visual impairment among children and young and middle-aged adults.
Through the years while I was suffering from this condition I went to many doctors and they all told me there wasn't anything that could be done with my visual problem. They said it should have been corrected with an eye patch when I was a child. I also went to eye surgeons to try and find relief from the discomfort and pain. I wanted to see if surgery would correct the weak eye muscles in my amblyopic eye to take the strain off of my good eye. They told me that surgery wouldn't help my double vision at all.
After I had found the answers to my problems and corrected my eyesight through this simple solution, years later I went and told a doctor how this simple correction made my eyes now work together as they did when I was a child. I told him that I no longer had pain or double vision. After telling him the story he was amazed and suggested that I write it all down and publish it on the Internet.
Years have now passed and I had forgotten what the doctor had told me about sharing what I had learned with others who might be suffering from the same affliction that I had. But just like a woman who is in labor and brings forth the child she forgets the pain that she suffered after the child is born. It appears to be the same with me. I had forgotten my suffering and forgot that there are millions of others who may now be suffering with what I suffered from for many years. I have never met anyone who had suffered with amblyopia so I just put it out of my mind until recently.
I am now making this book available to those of you who suffer from amblyopia. If you suffer from these symptoms this book is for you. I believe that the information in this book will relieve your symptoms. I am directing this book to the adults who have amblyopia and suffer from it.
Other Names: "Lazy eye"
The brain and the eye work together to produce vision. Light enters the eyes and is changed into nerve signals that travel along the optic nerve to the brain. Amblyopia is the medical term used when the vision in one of the eyes is reduced because the eye and the brain are not working together properly. The eye itself looks normal, but it is not being used normally because the brain is favoring the other eye. This condition is also sometimes called lazy eye.
It took me about 25 years to figure out what was happening to my vision because of amblyopia. During this time of intense affliction and pain I learned how amblyopia affected me and how it worked. I also discovered by trial and error how to correct it and live symptom free.
It should be remembered, that amblyopia causes more visual loss in the under 40 group than all the injuries, and diseases combined in this age group.
If you know any one who suffers from amblyopia, you would be doing him or her a favor by telling them about this book. If you have a child or know of a child who has amblyopia you might want to read this book to prepare yourself for some of the problems he or she will have as they develop acute amblyopia.
Amblyopia is the most common cause of decreased vision in children. The condition affects approximately 2 or 3 out of every 100 children. It is estimated that as many as three percent of children in the U.S. have some degree of vision impairment due to amblyopia. Unless it is successfully treated in early childhood, amblyopia usually persists into adulthood, and is the most common cause of monocular (one eye) visual impairment among children and young and middle-aged adults.
Through the years while I was suffering from this condition I went to many doctors and they all told me there wasn't anything that could be done with my visual problem. They said it should have been corrected with an eye patch when I was a child. I also went to eye surgeons to try and find relief from the discomfort and pain. I wanted to see if surgery would correct the weak eye muscles in my amblyopic eye to take the strain off of my good eye. They told me that surgery wouldn't help my double vision at all.
After I had found the answers to my problems and corrected my eyesight through this simple solution, years later I went and told a doctor how this simple correction made my eyes now work together as they did when I was a child. I told him that I no longer had pain or double vision. After telling him the story he was amazed and suggested that I write it all down and publish it on the Internet.
Years have now passed and I had forgotten what the doctor had told me about sharing what I had learned with others who might be suffering from the same affliction that I had. But just like a woman who is in labor and brings forth the child she forgets the pain that she suffered after the child is born. It appears to be the same with me. I had forgotten my suffering and forgot that there are millions of others who may now be suffering with what I suffered from for many years. I have never met anyone who had suffered with amblyopia so I just put it out of my mind until recently.
I am now making this book available to those of you who suffer from amblyopia. If you suffer from these symptoms this book is for you. I believe that the information in this book will relieve your symptoms. I am directing this book to the adults who have amblyopia and suffer from it.

