The need for patching treatment for amblyopia (lazy eye) is due to an unequal need for glasses in either eye when the (usually) worst eye can fail to develop optimum vision. Amblyopia is a condition where the vision of one (or more rarely both) eyes is reduced because the part of the brain responsible for vision does not develop properly. Amblyopia happens because the brain receives a weaker image from the eye with the greater optical error and prefers the eye with a clearer image. Children who have amblyopia because of optical errors are often given a patch to cover the good eye in addition to their spectacle correction to improve their vision. This review found that for some children with this type of amblyopia a period of spectacles wear can restore normal vision. At present it is not possible to tell at the start of treatment which children will just need spectacles and which ones will need a patch as well. For those children who still have reduced vision even after they have been wearing their spectacles for a while there is evidence that patching therapy further improves their vision. The amount of patching that will be needed for an individual child cannot yet be predicted. This is because the effects of factors such as age are not fully understood. These findings are based on the results of eight high-quality trials. No trials looking at treatment for children who had reduced vision in both eyes were found.
Patching treatment for amblyopia (lazy eye) caused by needing spectacles
Published Online:
April 18, 2012
Health topics:
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