What Are The Defects Of Vision

What Are The Defects Of Vision

The major defects of vision are:

  1. Short sightedness or myopia.
  2. Long sightedness or hypermetropia.
  3. Presbyopic
  4. Astigmatism

1. Short sightedness or myopia

Symptoms: Eye cannot see clearly beyond a certain distance. It means that the far point of the defective eye has shifted from infinity to a finite distance ahead.
Reasons: It is so because the image of distant objects is formed in front of the retina. It is shown in fig.
Myopic-eye-vision
Causes:
(i) The lens may be thicker (more converging) that the normal eye lens.
(ii) The eye ball may be elongated,
Elongated-eye
Fig. Elongated eye.
Correction: The extra converging power of eye lens is compensated by using a concave (diverging) lens of proper power (focal length) as shown in fig.
Myopia-corrected-by-a-concave-lens
Calculation: Let distance of far point F’ from eye = x. Then for lens to be used,
u = ∞, v = –x, f = ?
From lens formula,
\( \frac{1}{v}-\frac{1}{u}=\frac{1}{f} \)
\( \frac{1}{-x}=\frac{1}{f} \)
or  f = –x
The lens used must have focal length equal to the distance of the far point from the eye (–ve sign means concave lens).

2. Long sightedness or hypermetropia

Symptoms: With this defect eye cannot see clearly within a certain distance. It means that the near point of the defective eye has shifted from 25 cm to some more distance behind (away).
Reason: It is so because the image of near objects is formed behind the retina. It is shown in fig.
Hypermetropic-eye-vision
Hypermetropic eye vision.
Causes:
(i) The eye lens may be thinner (less converging) than the normal eye lens.
(ii) The eye ball may be oval distance between lens and retina becomes less than that for normal eye.
Oval-eye
Fig. Oval eye.
Correction: The deficiency in converging power of eye lens is compensated by using a convex (Converging) lens of proper power (focal length) as shown in fig.
Hypermetropia-corrected-by-a-convex-lens
Fig. Hypermetropia corrected by a convex lens.
Calculation: Let distance of near point N’ from eye = y. Then, for lens to be used
u = –D, v = –y, f = ?
From lens formula,
\( \frac{1}{v}-\frac{1}{u}=\frac{1}{f} \)
\( \frac{1}{-y}-\frac{1}{-D}=\frac{1}{f} \)
\( f=\frac{yD}{y-D}\text{       }\left( \text{Which is positive }\because \text{ }y\text{ }>\text{ }D \right) \)
f = (Which is positive ∵ y > D)
This is required expression for the focal length of the convex lens to be used.

3. Presbyopic    

The power of accommodation of the eye usually decreases with ageing. For most people, the near point gradually recedes away. They find it difficult to see nearby objects comfortably and distinctly without corrective eye-glasses. This defect is called Presbyopia.
It arises due to the gradual weakening of the ciliary muscles and diminishing flexibility of the eye lens. Sometimes, a person may suffer from both myopia and hypermetropia.
Such people often require bi-focal lenses. A common type of bi-focal lenses consists of both concave and convex lenses. The upper portion consists of a concave lens. It facilitates distant vision. The lower part is a convex lens. It facilitates near vision. These days, it is possible to correct the refractive defects with contact lenses or through surgical interventions.
eye-presbyopia-corrected

4. Astigmation:

A person suffering from this defect cannot simultaneously focus on both horizontal and vertical lines of a wire gauze.
Normal-Wire-Gauge
Normal Wire Gauge
Wire-gauge-with-distorted-vertical-lines
Wire gauge with distorted vertical lines
Wire-gauge-with-distorted-horizontal-lines
Wire gauge with distorted horizontal lines

This defect arises due to the fact that the cornea is not perfectly spherical
This defect can be corrected by using cylindrical lens
Cylindrical-lens
Cylindrical lens

Alternate Technology Available for the Blind
Till now, very limited resources were available for blind people, the most popular one being the traditional Braille. The Braille system, which enables the blind to read and write, uses patterns of raised dots to represent letters and numerals. With advancement of technology, there is a marked improvement in the kind of material available for the blind people.

  • Devices like portable Braille typewriter, talking calculator, talking clock, audio dictionary, dictaphone, drawings that are raised, and audio measuring devices are very useful to the blind.
  • Personalized blind-friendly computers equipped with software specially suited for the blind are available today. These make accessing information available on the Internet much easier for the blind. Reading software like Jaws and Kurzweil 3000 are also very useful for the blind.
  • Special keyboards based on the Braille system, with characters embossed on them, are available. Special scanners and printers are also available today, which have made accessing information very easy for the blind people.

Nutrition and Eye Health
Eye health has a very strong relationship with the food we eat. Eating a diet deficient in Vitamin A over a period of time may result in a condition called xerophthalmia (night blindness). By consuming foods rich in Vitamin A, like carrots, broccoli, tomatoes, liver, egg yolk, and butter, this condition can be reversed.

Our body needs oxygen for respiration. However, oxygen produces free radicals inside our body that can have a damaging effect on the retina of the eye. Many vitamins and minerals help in neutralizing these free radicals, and are, therefore, called antioxidants. Eating foods especially rich in vitamins A, C, and E can maintain a rich supply of antioxidants. Recent studies have indicated that antioxidants called ‘carotenoids’ present in coloured fruits and vegetables are very useful in maintaining eye health. Fresh fruits and vegetables can also help in preventing age-related degeneration of the macula (a part of the eye), thereby delaying age-related blindness.

Power Of Accommodation Of Eye

Power Of Accommodation Of Eye

The ability of the eye lens to adjust its focal length is called accommodation. However, the focal length of the eye lens cannot be decreased below a certain minimum limit. To see an object comfortably and distinctly, you must hold it at about 25 cm from the eyes. The minimum distance, at which objects can be seen most distinctly without strain, is called the least distance of distinct vision. It is also called the near point of the eye. For a young adult with normal vision, the near point is about 25 cm. The farthest point upto which the eye can see objects clearly is called the far point of the eye. It is infinity for a normal eye.
You may note here a normal eye can see objects clearly that are between 25 cm and infinity.

power-of-accommodation-of-eye

How The Human Eye Works

How The Human Eye Works

Human eye is the most delicate and complicated natural optical instrument which enables us to see the wonderful world of light.
Human-Eye
Diagram shows the section of a human eye by a horizontal plane. It is a spherical ball of diameter about 2.5 cm. The eyelids act as the shutters of the eye and protect them from injury. Internally the eye is made up of the following parts.

  • Cornea: It is the front buldged out part of eye ball covered by transparent sclerotic. It is a thin transparent tissue that covers the front of the eye.
    Cornea of the eye-front view.
    Cornea-of-the-eye-front-view
  • Iris: It is the coloured part of the eye and is involved mainly in controlling the size of the pupil. Its colour differs from person to person. The iris increases and decreases the size of the pupil to regulate the amount of light that enters through the pupil.
  • Sclera The white part of the eye that we can see is known as the sclera. It is filled with a clear watery fluid.
  • Pupil: The inner aperture that we can see in the centre of the eye is known as the pupil. Pupil is like a hole through which light enters the eye. It is central circular aperture in the iris. Its normal diameter is 1 mm but it can contract in excess light and expand in dim light, by means of two sets of involuntary muscular fibres.
  • Crystalline lens: It is a double convex lens L immediately behind iris. This is made of transparent concentric layers whose optical density increases towards the centre of the lens.
  • Ciliary muscles: The lens is connected of the sclerotic by the ciliary muscles. These muscles change thickness of the lens by relaxing and exerting pressure. These control the focal length of the eye lens.
  • Aqueous humour: Anterior chamber is filled with a transparent liquid of refractive index. The liquid is called the aqueous humour.
  • Vitreous humour: Posterior chamber is filled with a transparent watery liquid with little common salt having some refractive index. The liquid is called the vitreous humour.
  • Retina: Just behind the eyeball is a lining called the retina. It is the retina that is sensitive to light and has receptors called rods and cones. These rods and cones respond to light and generate impulses that can be read by the brain. The brain then sends back messages that tell us what we have seen. It forms innermost coat in the interior of the eye. It consists of a thin membrane which is rich in nerve fibres, containing two kinds of vision cells called rods and cones and blood vessels. It is sensitive to light, for it is a continuation of the optic nerves. It serves the purpose of a sensitive screen for the reception of the image formed by the lens system of the eye. [The rods are responsible for colour vision in dim light (Scotopic vision). The cones are responsible for vision under ordinary day light (Photopic vision).
  • Lens It is a transparent tissue between the pupil and the retina. The lens helps in focussing the light that passes through the pupil into the eye. This helps in focussing the image on the retina, by bending the light rays.
  • Optic nerve: It connects the eye to the brain and carries impulses to and from the brain.
  • Blind spot: The blind spot B. There is a portion on the retina where the nerve fibres enter the optic nerve. This portion does not have any rods and cones, and images falling on this portion of the retina cannot be ‘seen’. This spot is called the blind spot. It is the spot where the optic nerves enter the eye. It is also slightly raised and insensitive to light, because it is not covered with choroid and retina.

Working (Action of the eye):
The human eye is like a camera. Its lens system forms an image on a light-sensitive screen called the retina. Light enters the eye through a thin membrane called the cornea. It forms the transparent bulge on the front surface of the eyeball. The eyeball is approximately spherical in shape with a diameter of about 2.3 cm. Most of the refraction for the light rays entering the eye occurs at the outer surface of the cornea. The crystalline lens merely provides the finer adjustment of focal length required to focus objects at different distances on the retina. We find a structure called iris behind the cornea. Iris is a dark muscular diaphragm that controls the size of the pupil. The pupil regulates and controls the amount of light entering the eye. The eye lens forms an inverted real image of the object on the retina. The retina is a delicate membrane having enormous number of light-sensitive cells. The light-sensitive cells get activated upon illumination and generate electrical signals. These signals are sent to the brain via the optic nerves. The brain interprets these signals, and finally, processes the information so that we perceive objects as they are.

When light rays reach the lens of the eye, passing through the pupil, they bend and an inverted image is focussed on the retina. The rods and cones of the retina convert the image into an electrical impulse, which is taken by the optic nerve to the brain. The brain interprets the impulse and we comprehend what we have seen.

Light-rays-entering-eye

The image produced in the human eye is retained for a very short period of time after the object (producing the image) is removed. This phenomenon is called persistence of vision. The disc appears white when it is rotated because the images of the different colours overlap in our eyes and the brain perceives it as white. Sometimes the lens becomes cloudy or opaque. This causes a condition called cataract. Cataract is a very common disease all over the world and causes blurred or dimmed vision. In some cases there could be double vision or no vision at all. Using corrective glasses or contact lenses can rectify minor cases of cataract. Laser rays or even surgical operations can treat major ones. Cataract affects millions of people all over the world. Whenever there is any visual difficulty, we should consult an eye specialist immediately.

We can ‘see’ clearly only if the image is formed (focussed) on the retina. If the image is formed in front of the retina, or behind it, we cannot see clearly and it will appear to be blurred. For a person with normal eyes, it is easy to see both nearby and far off objects clearly. While reading, a book is held about 25 cm away from the eyes. However, you would have noticed that some people need to hold the book very close to their eyes to be able to see the writing clearly. Such people are said to be short sighted. On the other hand, there are some people who find it difficult to see things that are nearby but find it easier to see objects that are far away. For example, they may find it easier to read the writing on a billboard, but might find it difficult to read a book at a normal distance. Such people are said to be long sighted.

The formation of the image in front of the retina results in a condition called myopia or short sightedness. A person suffering from myopia cannot see far off objects very clearly. This defect can be corrected by wearing spectacles with concave lenses. The formation of the image behind the retina results in a condition called hypermetropia or long sightedness. A person suffering from hypermetropia cannot see nearby objects very clearly. This defect can be corrected by wearing spectacles with convex lenses.