A couple of months ago my oldest (12 yo) said that she was having trouble seeing the board at school. I took her to the eye doctor and was wondering if she was subconsciously trying to get glasses (she always wanted them!) Nope. She needed them. (Not a shining moment in parenting) :)
She came home and told her little sister all about it (she is 7). How you get your eyes dilated, how they ask you a ton of questions. Her sister said "I want to go to the eye doctor" I explained how J was having trouble seeing and that she (L) had passed the vision test at school so she might need to go later. She very quietly said "I do have problems, I see two of everything." Um. what? I glanced over at Mark to make sure he had heard too. Soooooo, I made an appointment for her too. After a few tests the doctor asks us to schedule another appointment she wanted to run more tests. We come back a week later and she confirms there is in fact a problem. I figured there was. As I looked at the one giant H on the board in front of her. L said there were two, and after 40 minutes of the Dr. flipping lenses in front of her and the H's "moving in different directions" the doctor could not get them to ever line up. She gave an initial diagnosis, and scheduled an appointment in a month with a specialist....a month. It has been a long month. I did the bare minimum of research on her initial diagnosis and saw the frequent mention of eye surgery, the unknown part was overwhelming.
Yesterday was her appointment with a specialist. I was so ready to get this done. I promise I am not putting this out there as a pity party. This is more of a public service announcement, because of the diagnosis. The tech came in and did a few tests without her dilated. Looked at me, told me that her initial diagnosis was wrong. What L has is called Convergence Insufficiency. He made me watch as he asked her to follow the tip of the pen as it moved to the bridge of her nose. She should have been cross eyed. She looked straight ahead during the test. She cannot move her muscles in that way. It will cause double vision if this is how you are made. It will be fixed with exercises and potentially glasses. YAY!! To say we are relieved is an understatement. Once I researched more about this I feel like I need to stand tall and scream to people about this condition.
ONE IN 20 KIDS have this. It goes undetected in most school eye appointments. SO most likely there is a kid in each class that has this. It effects learning and many other things. Sometimes the kids are diagnosed as a having an attention problem or even (rarely) ADHD is diagnosed and this is the actual problem. here are more facts.... I just want others to know. SO many of these things were going on with L and we just didn't put it together because she never mentioned it and was doing pretty well in school.
- eyestrain (especially with or after reading)
- headaches
- blurred vision
- double vision
- inability to concentrate
- short attention span
- frequent loss of place
- squinting, rubbing, closing or covering an eye
- sleepiness during the activity
- trouble remembering what was read
- words appear to move, jump, swim or float
- problems with motion sickness and/or vertigo
- trouble catching balls and other objects thrown through the air
- avoidance of tasks that require depth perception (games involving smaller balls traveling through the air, handicrafts, and/or hand-eye coordination, etc.)
- frequent mishaps due to misjudgment of physical distances (particularly within twenty feet of the person's body), such as:
- trips and stumbles on uneven surfaces, stairs, and curbs, etc.
- frequent spilling or knocking over of objects
- bumping into doors, furniture and other stationary objects
- sports and/or car parking accidents
- avoidance of eye contact
- poor posture while doing activities requiring near vision
- one shoulder noticably higher
- frequent head tilt
- problems with motion sickness and/or vertigo
Detection and Diagnosis of Convergence Insufficiency
Convergence (eye teaming) and accommodation (focusing) tests are the important diagnostic tools. A basic eye exam or screening with the 20/20 eye chart is not adequate for the detection of convergence insufficiency (and many other visual conditions). A person can pass the 20/20 test and still have convergence insufficiency. A comprehensive vision evaluation by an eye doctor who tests binocular (two-eyed) vision and who can refer or provide for in-office vision therapy is recommended for all individuals who do reading and deskwork -- particularly students of any age.
http://convergenceinsufficiency.net/detail.asp?id=18&pid=13
I am just putting all this out there in case you have a kiddo that has more of these symptoms on the list above and you cant figure it out.
Very happy for the results this week and the people that kept us in their thoughts and prayers!
L