cORRECT binocular vision
Prism therapy is a type of vision therapy that helps binocular visual problems.
Binocular vision is when the brain is not able to have both eyes working together at the same time. This can cause you to have double vision, your eyes can turn inward or outward, and you may have trouble focusing. Prism therapy is when your optometrist adds corrective prisms to the current lenses in your glasses. It does not change the way your lenses look. Your brain, however, can process the change the prism creates to images you see through your lenses. If you think you may have problems with binocular vision and you are in the New Hyde Park area, visit Village Optical today.
Not many people have heard about Prism therapy. It is a procedure used to treat patients with vision problems that stem from an injury or condition that affects the oculomotor system. In these patients, the eye does not track objects in the real world in the way that it should. You might think of it as being similar to a rifle that has a maladjusted scope. When the user attempts to fire at a given point, the projectile is off the mark. Prism therapy aims to correct the neurological diversion of the patient’s eye and her or his intended point of focus.
The two primary ways prism therapy is used are compensatory and therapeutic prism vision therapy. The purpose of compensatory PT is to reduce the workload of the patient by compensating for visual acuity defects. Therapeutic PT increases the workload on the patient’s visual system in order to strengthen it.
There are four primary ways in which the visual system can and may respond to prism therapy. It could not respond at all, in which case the resulting image is blurry or doubled. This can be remedied by making changes in the way the prism is deployed. The second way the visual system may respond is with a blurry and a non-double image. It could also respond with a clear and a double image or a clear and single image.
The four techniques your eye doctor may use are:
1. To stimulate eye movement toward the apex of the prism
2. To stimulate convergence on a given point
3. To stimulate divergence from a given point
4. To decrease suppression
These probably all sound rather cryptic, but these are just the different ways your optometrist can use prism therapy to adjust damaged vision.
Village Optical is the premier optometrist in New Hyde Park. Each member of our staff at Village Optical has been hand-selected for their individual level of expertise. Our staff focuses on each patient as an individual with unique needs and wants. Focusing our attention on each person. We strive to make sure the overall comfort and understanding of the patient remain at the forefront of our service. Understanding you have a busy schedule and we work hard to make sure we can fit into your day.