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Good News Bad News

Diabetes Mellitus

 

Good News Bad News

 

 

   None of us likes getting bad news.  But everyone likes good news.  So when they come coupled together, our response is understandably mixed.

For example, finding out that you have diabetes mellitus (DM) is difficult to learn.  But catching it early and then making some big and important changes in your life because of that “bad” news can be quite positive.  That’s the “good” part.

As an eye doctor here on the Monterey Peninsula, I’m not just caring for your vision.  I’m addressing your eye health.  And many times these findings point to a bigger overall health finding, like diabetes.  Diabetes is a very serious disease and can be quite insidious.  In other words, it can really sneak up on you.

The story of one patient comes to mind that nicely reflects how getting some bad news was then changed around for the better.

“Jim” is a kindly 63 year-old retired police officer who has been coming to me for his yearly eye exams for several years now.  Each year I notice a bit more weight. He says “some doc told him years ago he had high blood pressure” but he never went back to follow up on it. Every year I stress how important it is to see a primary care physician (PCP), how is his blood sugar, what’s his blood pressure?  And each year he tells me that he “hates going to a regular doctor, hasn’t gone in years, has no idea what his blood sugar is or his blood pressure, but he’s fine, everything’s just fine.”  During his eye exams his eyes have always been healthy and his blood pressure normal.  About three years ago Jim came into my exam room slurping on a Big Gulp of Pepsi. He complained about how his vision “comes and goes” and that he’s always tired.  He now appears to be about 40 pounds overweight and is bragging about his “excessive” junk-food habits.

Jim’s right retina had a chunk of cholesterol (a plaque) blocking a critical blood vessel, and a mild cataract we’d been following in his left eye was now significantly worse, in just one year.  These were serious findings which I referred out for proper treatment as well as a complete physical evaluation. If I’m seeing it in his eyes, it’s occurring elsewhere too.

Jim’s visual symptoms, age, weight, fatigue, poor eating habits, a vague blood pressure history and now a retinal plaque and advanced cataract all pointed to a diabetes diagnosis as well as probable hypertension and cholesterol changes.

The plaque resolved and cataract surgery was performed.  Jim took his new diagnosis very seriously and began a healthy lifestyle with good food choices and he got active too.

I saw him a few months ago and he has dropped 36 pounds, his wife lost 27 pounds, his blood sugar and blood pressure are under control, and he knows what those numbers are.  He boasts that his A1C is 5.6.  A diabetic’s ideal A1C should be less than 6.0.  He has a good relationship with his physician and with his diabetic specialist and has their numbers on his cell phone.  Jim smiles a lot now.  He looks terrific and has taken up ballroom dancing.  He tells the best jokes to us and to his four grandchildren.

I’d say that’s good news.  Good news for me to see his success right in front of me, and more importantly, good news for Jim because he took control of his situation and made steps to turn it around.

Bravo Jim!

Let’s talk…..

 

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Have a great holiday season!

On behalf of all of us here at EyeMD on Cass, we wish you a warm and safe holiday season!

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IntraLase

IntraLase

 

I’m sure you have all heard of the refractive procedure known as LASIK.  LASIK has been the primary form of refractive surgery for years.  However, technology has a way of vastly improving on current methods, and corrective eye surgery is no different.  IntraLase is now the preferred technology of surgeons in the United States.  Indeed, since 2009, 31.4 million laser vision correction procedures have been done worldwide.

If you are thinking of LASIK, read on to get the up to date facts on the best technology!

   So, what is IntraLase, and is it the right procedure for you?  First, IntraLase has several equivalent names: IntraLase, Bladeless LASIK, all-laser LASIK, Blade-free LASIK, and iLASIK. All of these terms refer to the same femtosecond laser technology.

How does LASIK differ from IntraLase?  Conventional LASIK uses a microkeratome blade to create a flap on your cornea.  That flap is then laid back by the surgeon and the laser completes the procedure.  With IntraLase, there is no blade.  A flap is still created on your cornea, but it’s done without a blade! This bladeless technique is now the most advanced laser vision correction available, and can help you achieve clear, precise vision.  More surgeons are choosing IntraLase because the blade free method provides greater precision and improved patient outcomes.

Dr. Philip Penrose is the only doctor on the Monterey peninsula doing this specialized procedure!

If you are thinking of having laser vision done, set up your pre-procedure consultation with Dr. Penrose.  Every eye is unique.  So, Dr. Penrose will determine your candidacy for the procedure, help establish expectations, and, as a candidate, indicate the range of your probable outcomes based on your prescription and healing profile. When you have the iLASIK procedure, you’ll get a completely integrated, personalized procedure based on advanced vision correction technology at every step.    You’ll have special tests done before your procedure.  One is the WaveScan. It gives a 3-D map of your eyes that gets integrated to form that precise digital map design he will use for your eyes!

Though each candidate’s specific prescription parameters vary, the general range of the blade-free method is from approximately -7 Diopters of nearsightedness to +3 Diopters in farsightedness, with roughly 3 Diopters of astigmatism.

I’m sure you still have questions about this amazing procedure, so take a few minutes and set up that consultation with Dr. Penrose so you can get all the facts you need to make an informed decision about the Blade-free LASIK option!

Contact Yesenia (our surgical technician) today!

 

 

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Contacts For Halloween

Contacts For Halloween

   It’s almost here!  Halloween is once again only weeks away.  Halloween (All Hollow’s Eve) is quickly becoming #2 in holiday profits for The United States, second to Christmas.  There are so many fun ways to celebrate, and contact lenses are one of them.

Artistically “painted” contacts have been around for decades, originating in Hollywood as part of a monster’s make-up.  But now several companies also make them available to the general public.  Though they are “for fun,” or theatrical purposes, they are still classified as “a medical device” and all of the laws and safeguards are in place when obtaining a prescription for them. It’s just like any other contact lens prescription.  Yes you need a prescription to purchase a pair.  If you bought a pair at the mall without a doctor’s fitting and prescription, that was an illegal purchase!

Buyer beware!

Here’s how to do it right.  It’s easy to do.  You should already be getting an annual eye exam.  So just set up a contact lens fitting.  An eye doctor must examine your eyes to be sure you are a good candidate for contacts.  Then a clear (no artwork), Plano (no prescription) lens is placed on your eye (of the same brand/company as the Halloween lens you want) to assess fit, movement and comfort, etc.  Once that’s okayed you can then order a pair of cat eyes or phantom or zebra.  Keep in mind you can pick any design, but once you’ve actually purchased your pair, it’s yours.  You can’t return them for something else next week. You can select which design you want by looking at the company brochure, or the computer images of the designs at your doctor’s office.

Each doctor will have his/her own fitting fees, and it will be less if you already wear contacts because you won’t need training, etc. 

 

You absolutely can wear something insane on your eyes as part of your costume!  !  It’s best to get going on the process well before Halloween though; perhaps early October at the latest.  Just take the proper steps so you can enjoy them in the best health.

 

 

 

 

Things to keep in mind:

  1. The lenses themselves are not cheap.  Roughly $200.00 per pair.
  2. Some only come in Plano (no prescription), and others can have a prescription in them; usually up to a minus six Diopters.
  3. Your peripheral vision is limited because only a pinhole (2-3mm) is left clear in the center for you to see through to maximize the artwork.

Don’t run down to Tijuana to snatch up a pair of zombie red contacts along with a pack of gum and some sunscreen!  Take care of your eyes, do it right and you’ll have a great Halloween!

Let’s talk….

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The Achoo Syndrome

 

The ACHOO Syndrome

 

   A patient recently came up with an eye question I’ve heard many times over the years. 

   J.G. asked, “Doc, almost every time I drive through the tunnel from Pacific Grove into Monterey and I pop out into the sunshine, I sneeze!  Why do I do that?”

   Sneezing in the sunlight is a unique phenomenon.  Not everyone experiences it and we don’t really understand how or why it happens.

   Her friend, J.G. went on to say, was one day listening to this story and the prediction of an imminent sneeze and had serious doubts.  But, sure enough, emerging into the sun J.G. promptly sneezed.  Her friend was sure she was faking it!  J.G. was not faking it, although you can pretend to sneeze.  I once had a golden retriever, Ginger, who would immediately sneeze right after I did.  It was a game to her, so I’d fake one two three more sneezes and she’d repeat all three with a thumping tail!

   Those in the know have tried to explain why this happens for centuries.

 

   Aristotle asked, “Why does the heat of the sun provoke sneezing?”  Then much later Francis Bacon dismissed the whole notion when he faced the sun with eyes closed and he did not sneeze.  He falsely concluded it was all boloney!  Actually, we now know only about 25% of the population have this ability. Sir Bacon was unknowingly in that 75%. 

  I use the word ‘ability’ loosely; as though it’s a skill or a trait with a certain purpose.  But there does not seem to be any value in doing this, nor is there anything negative, except for annoying those around you.  Since the ACHOO syndrome, or ‘photic sneeze reflex’, as it’s been called, is not of dire medical import to understand, there have not been any large studies on this.  But it is interesting nonetheless.

   It’s an anatomical thing.  Here’s how it probably happens:  When the little hairs lining your nasal cavities are stimulated or bothered by something (wind, dust, pet hair, chemicals, allergies or the cold virus) they send a message to your brain to do something FAST to get rid of it.  That message travels along the naso-ciliary nerve.  Your brain reads the message and sends back the response to sneeze.  And you sneeze.  The cool thing here is that that naso-ciliary nerve does double duty and also picks up “stimulation” messages from the ciliary portion-your eyes.  A sudden flash of light is not only ‘seen’ by your optic nerve.  How your pupils react to light or any ‘electrical-type’ stimulus can also be picked up by that ciliary nerve.  As that light message travels along to the brain, there’s a branch that signals the ‘naso’ (nose) part sometimes and you sneeze!  

   We now know that the ‘ACHOO syndrome’ is inherited in an autosomally dominant fashion.  That means only one parent needs to be a ‘sun-sneezer’ to pass it on to half of his/her kids.  And this trait affects men and women equally.

 

   The sun is not the only culprit either.  I’ve heard people say that they sneeze when they look into a campfire, or when the sun shines into their eyes off of a car’s metal bumper, (I’m dating myself as there are no more metal bumpers!) or even as I’m examining their eyes with my intense light instruments.  It’s normal.  I wonder. Do any of you have interesting examples of this phenomenon?  Let me know.

Let’s talk…

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Do Fish Blink?

Do Fish Blink?

 

   Wow.  Fish don’t blink like we do.   But when asked this question, I wasn’t immediately ready with a complete explanation as to why.  I had to look into this one.

   Let’s look first at why we blink.  The outer most part of our eyeball, the cornea, is a perfectly clear optical layer exposed to the air that must stay lubricated to function well.  Our eyelids, both upper and lower, are equipped with glands that secrete the proper components onto our eye surface to keep things moist.  The action of our lids closing and touching each other, on average every four or five seconds, keeps everything constantly well distributed and working properly.  Anything that interferes with this mechanism causes damage to our cornea and conjunctiva.  People who don’t close their eyes completely when they sleep, for instance, can have serious keratinitis issues in that area left exposed to the air night after night.

   So, what about fish?  Obviously fish live underwater so the risk of their corneas being exposed to the air is not an issue to them.  So they do not have eyelids.  If you don’t have eyelids, you can’t blink.  But the closing of eyelids is not solely to distribute a tear film.  It’s also for protection.  We certainly know about our amazingly fast ability to blink and/or keep our eyes closed in the face of danger.  It’s a normal survival skill.  The average speed of a human blink is 1/10th of a second!  But what about fish?  They run into danger all the time.  What do they do?  Nothing.  They are stupid and they die and we eat them.  End of story.

   No, seriously, fish are way faster than us in their protective reflexes.  They have to be because they don’t have our brain power to make higher decisions like we do.  They also have evolved in ways that provide camouflage by having “eyeball-like” spots on the other side of their bodies to throw off predators.  I have read about a few species of shark that actually do have a type of eyelids that move laterally, like the opening and closing of elevator doors, but you’d need to do your own Goggling to look into that further.

Isn’t our planet amazing?

Let’s talk…

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What’s Behind Door Number One?

What’s Behind Door Number One?

 

   Another curious patient came up with a great question the other day. 

   She asks, “Why can’t we see the back of our eyelids when we close our eyes?”

   This again, is a terrific question.  You’d think, with our eyelids being literally right in front of us, that we should be able to see behind there.  But no, we can’t.

   But this does bring up the topics of night vision and how our rods and cones work in the dark.

   We’ve talked before about how our retina is made up of photoreceptor cells, both rods and cones.  Those photoreceptor cells need light to do their thing.  They can’t send a message to our brain of what’s being presented in front of them unless light is included.  As soon as you close your eyes, the admission of light stops.

  

 “Then how do we see at night?” you may ask.

    We humans don’t actually see very well at night.  For this very reason; there is not enough light.  Our best , sharpest vision utilizes the cones in our retinas.  Cones work best in daylight. The rods do their thing mostly in lesser light, called scotopic vision. But they are not as precise as our cones in interpreting things sharply.  They do okay though.  For example, what happens when you walk into a darkened movie theater?  You are immediately thrown into a sort of blindness and you need to stand there like a goof while you wait for your eyes to adjust a bit so you can start hunting for a seat, right?  What your eyes are actually doing is dark adapting. When you are in the lobby throwing down a twenty for popcorn, your retinal cones, being in a fairly well lit room, are helping you see just fine.  But once in the theater, your cones are not happy and can’t do well.  They are momentarily unable to assist you and the rods must wake up and help.  This takes anywhere from a few seconds to a minute or so.  The older we get, by the way, the longer this process takes. You can speed up the process by looking down at the floor and not at the screen while you adapt.  This way, your cones, not having any light to feed on, have to take a break and let your rods kick in.  The longer you stare at the previews, the longer it will take to dark adapt and you’ll be standing there for awhile! Once your “night vision” has kicked in you are able to find a seat, but you may notice your vision is not totally clear.  You can’t, for instance, tell blues from reds, or if there’s a cola spilled on the seat you chose. Thankfully once the movie begins there is plenty of light and both your rods and cones are hard at work telling your head what you are seeing.   The rods in your retina are also responsible for your peripheral vision. Way out in the periphery of your retina its pretty much rods only, and they help you to see things coming up alongside you.  For example, when you are driving, you need to be able to see a child running into the street from the side.  Also, when you are changing lanes, your peripheral vision is what’s telling you if there is a car in that lane.  A fighter pilot also needs to know as soon as possible if the enemy is approaching from behind him!

Keep those questions coming!

Let’s talk…

 

 

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Fusion

 

Fusion

 While surfing the ‘net for answers regarding her binocular vision, Mary read my 3D blog and had additional questions.  Since these types of inquiries come up often, I thought it would be best to answer her in another blog!

   Mary’s comment is reproduced here:

  Mary writes:

I ran into your blog while looking for information about monocular fixation syndrome.  I do not have binocular vision.  From what I understand it is a condition in the brain where the nerves don’t touch.  I have had cataract surgery and was not given the choice of corrected vision since my eyes work independently.    Can you explain this better.     I have been unsuccessful in locating any information on the web.

 

   Thank you for responding to my 3D blog.  Looking at your question it seems, essentially, that you are asking about the concept of fusion.  I’ll try to break down your issues one by one, but please keep in mind that not having your full eye history at hand and, of course, not having seen you myself, I can merely cover the topic in general and hope that you gain more insight.

   Look at the flower above.  If you want to look at the flower, your extraocular muscles (the muscles that move the eyes) move quickly, rotating your eyes so that the image of the flower lands on the fovea.  Positioning that flower onto your fovea is called fixation.  A fixating eye aims straight at the target. You only need one eye to fixate. But we have two eyes, and two foveas.  Here’s an experiment you can try.  Find a red colored piece of plastic, like plastic wrap or a red tinted plastic lid from the kitchen that’s transparent enough to see through, and hold that over your right eye only. Now, cover the right eye and look at the flower.  You are now fixating monocularly with your left eye and the flower probably has a mix of colors.   Now cover your left eye instead and look through the tinted piece at the flower.  You are now monocularly fixating on the flower again, but with your right eye along with the red tint and now the red ring is gone, the blues are darker, and the pinks are faded.  But if you open both eyes, with monocular fixation problems, your brain is confused and only one eye continues to participate for some reason, so you see either the regular mix of colors or the dark blues with no reds or pinks.  You may even rapidly switch back and forth between the eyes, but they won’t work together at the task. Those with binocular vision will see the flower as a strange blended mix of bright colors.   Binocular fixation occurs only when both visual axes, one for each eye, intersect at the flower.  See Figure 1.

 

 

     In Figure 1, the image of the flower is landing on the fovea of each eye.  The visual axes of each eye intersect at the flower.  When both eyes see the flower, they fuse that image, as one, and that information goes to your brain as one single binocular image of a flower.  To obtain fusion, you need binocular cooperation with equal vision and straight (aligned) eyes.  If there is a misalignment, (see Figure 2) your brain “reads” that as either double vision or you learn to suppress that image in one eye.  Here, the visual axis of the right eye is pointing somewhere other than the flower, so fusion cannot occur.

 

   Likewise, if your vision is not equal between the eyes, your brain “reads” this as double or you suppress one eye.  For example, if you have a dense cataract in one eye, or one eye has poor vision for a variety of reasons, your binocular vision can be affected or not even be present.

    From your question, it sounds like each of your eyes can see.  They would not have done cataract surgery on a truly non-seeing eye.  But your eyes don’t work together.  Since you are not seeing double, you have learned how to suppress the eye not participating in what you are looking at in that moment.  While you may see this as a problem, this is not unusual at all.  In fact, this is the basic concept of monovision with contact lens wearers.  One eye wears a contact that helps you to see up close.  The other eye wears a lens that sees far away.  Your brain switches back and forth, “listening” to each eye as needed.  As in reading a menu then looking up to see out the window, your brain uses the appropriate eye to do this.  The same concept can be utilized with cataract surgery to minimize the use of reading glasses.  Yes, it can be a bit odd to get used to.  Yes, your depth perception is off.  But it usually works. 

   It sounds like you have been doing this all your life for reasons unknown, and your cataract surgeon corrected each eye for its best vision.  Then you merely continued to adapt and function like you always have.  If you did not have binocular vision prior to cataract surgery, it’s unlikely that you would obtain it afterwards. You are using both of your eyes.  They just don’t work together.  Depending on the cause of your situation, it may or may not have been correctable if caught at a very young age with various procedures and methods.  But as an adult, you pretty much have to work with what you have.

   As to your statement, “…a condition in the brain where the nerves don’t touch.” that’s not true. Your optic nerves, one for each eye, take visual data back to the brain where it is interpreted as one unified message. It’s not a matter of “touching” rather, your brain, for whatever reason, is only “listening” to one channel at a time.  Not unlike our Congress and Senate.  They are all in Washington D.C., even sit together and partake in morning coffee and Danish, but they don’t seem to work together on anything!

   I hope this helps!

 

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Eye Nutrition

Eye Nutrition

 

     Despite our poor economy of late, it seems the vitamin supplement business is booming. With all of our advancements in medicine and technology, it would appear that there is now a “perfect pill” for every conceivable nutritional problem we may have.  And as an eye doctor, it’s as though lately everywhere I look there are advertisements for eye vitamins of every kind. But is there a vitamin for every visual disorder or eye disease you may have or be at risk acquiring?

     The short answer is no; there is not a magic pill for everything/anything.  We all know that’s essentially true.  So, why do we see such a flood of products out there and how are we to wade through the confusion?

     This is a huge subject to cover here, but I’d like to take a brief walk through the basics of eye nutrition that have been shown to be beneficial to your eyes.

    First, let’s take a step back and look at the larger picture of vitamin supplementation in general. Keep in mind that this is a mega money making industry.  World-wide, the vitamin supply industry in 2008, for example, grossed $68 billion dollars.  In the same year, the eye health ingredients market made $138 million in the USA! Is all of this regulated like our drug market?  No. The FDA (Food and Drug Administration) only regulates these products by having them state their potency and the ingredients.  And they must not contain pharmaceuticals or steroids. Unfortunately the FDA is not responsible for ensuring that a nutritional supplement or ingredient is safe before it is marketed.  Only the manufacturer of that supplement is responsible.  The FDA only has to do something after it hits the market if an issue of safety arises.   Since these manufacturers are not held to the testing regulations of our pharmaceuticals, mislabeling and confusion are of concern.

     This does not mean that everyone is out to get you, but “buyer beware” should always be on your mind. You may be thinking, if nutritional supplementation is all a money-making scheme, then why take anything at all? Ideally, of course, we should be getting everything we need in the foods we eat, right? But we don’t.  Life in 2012 can be full of stress, poor eating habits, lack of sleep, smoking and alcohol consumption, and environmental pollutants in the air, water and food supply.  These all take their toll on us resulting in increased diseases and poor quality of life. My mom used to say that if they could make one vitamin pill that had everything in it to make up for our poor diets each day, it would be the size of a tennis ball!  

     By far, research has shown that a healthy lifestyle of exercise and non-smoking along with eating plenty of leafy vegetables high in the antioxidants, as well as foods rich in zinc and omega 3 fats can prevent many health conditions and slow the progress of diseases already acquired.  Unfortunately, about 80% of today’s Americans consume only five servings of fruits and vegetables each day, while the recommended amount is around twelve servings! 

    What does this mean for our eyes?  Many studies have proven a direct link between what we eat or don’t eat and the incidence of ocular diseases like macular degeneration and dry eyes.  Diets rich in green leafy vegetables, red, orange and yellow vegetables and fruit, nuts, and cold-water fatty fish have been shown to either prevent or slow the progression of these eye diseases. For your eye health specifically, the advantages of good nutrition seem to work best when you make it a lifelong choice instead of starting to take supplements as a response to a disease.   So, prevention is the key for the most part.

     We have been told that our whole-body health has been shown to benefit hugely by eating a healthful diet with antioxidants to bump up what our modern lifestyles seem to lack.  But we don’t seem to be doing well at that so let’s try to get these into our system with some combination of diet and supplementation.

     So, what is an antioxidant?  Antioxidants are nutrients (vitamins and minerals) and enzymes that counteract the damaging, but normal effects of oxidation in animal tissue.  Fighting oxidation is a good thing. The antioxidants that specifically help your eyes are; vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin E, zinc, three carotenoids: lutein, zeaxanthin and meso-zeaxanthin,  and the essential fatty acids DHA and EPA or the omega-3’s as they are called.

     Vitamin A is somewhat debatable as an antioxidant, but is found in foods of animal origin like egg yolks, liver, fish oil, whole milk and butter. In green, yellow and orange vegetables it’s in the form of β-carotene.  Once you eat a carrot, it goes to your liver and changes into vitamin A and has protective properties for your eyes. So, yes carrots are good for you, but not really any better than all the other green, yellow and orange veggies.  Vitamin C can be found in our fruits and vegetables.  Vitamin E is in nuts, some cereals, vegetable oils, and sweet potatoes.  Zinc is in red meat, oysters and poultry.  Lutein, zeaxanthin and meso-zeaxanthin (Carotenoids) are found naturally in green leafy vegetables.  Omega-3’s or the essential fatty acids DHA and EPA are found naturally in tuna, salmon, sardines, ground flaxseed and walnuts as well as in fish oil supplements.

     So, how does all this help our eyes regarding eye disease?

     Studies have shown that our macular pigment, (in the area where we get macular degeneration), and our retinal photoreceptors can be damaged by oxidative radicals.  Antioxidants in our diets fight these radicals and protect our eyes.  As a prevention for macular degeneration or for those at risk due to family history, the antioxidants lutein and zeaxanthin, zinc and the omega-3’s may preserve the integrity of the macula.  If you already have macular degeneration, increased doses of lutein, zeaxanthin and the omega 3’s have been shown to slow the progression to worsening degeneration, again by protecting the macula. 

     The omega 3’s have shown in study after study to help those with dry eyes, meibomian gland dysfunction and blepharitis conditions. They are often prescribed to patients one to three months in advance of having LASIK surgery to be sure the eyes are well lubricated with a healthy tear film prior to the procedure.

     Recent clinical trials show that omega 3’s, lutein and vitamin A palmitate can slow further vision loss in some forms of Retinitis Pigmentosa.  There was no prevention, cure or reversal, but a slowing of progression of the disease.

     That’s pretty amazing stuff for eye vitamin supplements. It’s not all hype and profit.  When applied to your diet and lifestyle, these nutrients, weather taken in your diet or via supplements, can make a big impact on your eye health both preventatively and as a treatment in many cases.

     The saying, “Everything in moderation” is really true.  It may seem like I’m telling you to load up on all of these nutraceuticals; the more the better, what’s the harm?  No, as in everything, too much is not a good thing. 

     For example, high doses of vitamin A can affect liver function, as well as have other adverse systemic effects.   In its β-carotene form, it has also shown some negative effects on those who smoke or who have recently quit smoking.  You must consult with your doctor regarding all of these supplements, just like they are drugs.  Mega doses of vitamin E can increase the effects of pharmaceutical blood thinners.  When zinc is taken as a supplement, it’s best to combine it with copper. High doses of zinc alone have been shown to affect the absorption of other nutrients; including the drug tetracycline.

     How do you get these supplements?  There are many products and formulations out there, at your local drug stores to the big supermarket chains.  Read those labels.  Many multivitamins include reasonable doses of these key eye nutrients. You need to sit down with your doctor to be sure you are getting the correct dosages.  Those of you at high risk for macular degeneration or with dry macular degeneration, for example, need higher doses of some of these nutrients now, not later. Then you can select from foods, pills, gel-caps, tablets, even powders to be put into shakes.  It’s not too hard to incorporate two servings of tuna per week into your lifestyle.  Nor is it too difficult to pile on the lettuce and veggies, even as in-between snacks instead of grabbing those empty sugary goodies. Diabetes and obesity appear to be in epidemic proportions, especially in our children, and we actually have choices we can make today that will make a difference. 

     This review is meant only to guide you to having an informative conversation with your eye doctor about your specific eye health needs.  These supplements need to be considered drugs, as they can be potent to your eye health as well as interacting with your other systemic medications. Everyone is different, and your eye doctor can tailor the vision supplements to fit your eyes right now and for your future eye health.

Let’s talk…

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The London Olympics

The 2012 London Olympics

    It’s amazing that we are already watching the 2012 Olympics!

    It is such an honor to see each of our incredible Olympians giving their all.

    Our doctors and staff here at Eye MD on Cass wish every athlete the best of luck in London.  Though most of us can only see you from across the pond, we are with you 110%!

    And above all, have fun and enjoy the experience!

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    Monterey, CA 93940
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