Appointments & Orders
If you associate eye cataracts as signs of “growing older,” you are correct. Maturing is the most prevalent cause.
Your eyes are delicate organs with many intricate components. Most people spend all of their waking hours with their eyes open.
Driving can pose many challenges for people with low vision. Bioptic lenses can be a choice for some motorists with less-than-ideal eyesight.
Most people who take medications daily don’t realize that some of those drugs’ side effects include dry eye. Moisture is crucial for your eyes to function well.
People with vision loss aren’t blind; they can see but just not very well. Vision loss makes being out and about in public challenging and somewhat stressful.
For many of us, Wintertime is associated with drab days, soft sunlight and cold temperatures.
When something unwanted shows up in your peepers—an eyelash, dust, a fleck of dirt—they produce tears to flush it out.
About 45 million Americans age 18 and older wear contact lenses. Ninety-three percent of them use soft lenses.
The Centers for Disease Control estimates that 45 million people in the U. S. wear contact lenses; two-thirds of them are female.
Your eyesight is precious. You need to do as much as you can to protect it and help your vision be as clear as possible.
If your eyes don’t make enough tears to stay wet or if your tears don’t hang around long enough to keep your eyes moist, you’re not alone with this bothersome condition.
Think of each of your eyes as a complex and delicate machine—such as a fine-quality, high-performance Italian sports car.