latent hyperopia eyewiki:Intermittent Exotropia
Intermittent Exotropia
由RBhola著作·被引用4次—Exodeviations(fromGreekεξοτρὀπια,εξοexomeaningtoexitormoveoutof”)areeithermanifest(exotropia)orlatent(exophoria).。其他文章還包含有:「AccommodativeEsotropia」、「Esotropia」、「Farsightedness」、「HypermetropiaHyperopia」、「Hyperopia」、「Hyperopia」、「RefractiveSurgeryforHyperopia」、「TheMovingTargetofHyperopia」、「UnderstandingLatentHyperopia」
查看更多 離開網站Accommodative Esotropia
https://eyewiki.org
Accommodative esotropia is an inward turning of one or both eyes that occurs with activation of the accommodative reflex.
Esotropia
https://eyewiki.org
It is associated with a large angle deviation, fusion maldevelopment nystagmus (latent ... hyperopia and 2) Non-refractive (high AC/A ratio) ...
Farsightedness
https://en.wikipedia.org
Far-sightedness, also known as long-sightedness, hypermetropia, and hyperopia, is a condition of the eye where distant objects are seen clearly but near ...
HypermetropiaHyperopia
https://www.slideshare.net
Find manifest hyperopia, latent hyperopia, absolute hyperopia, facultative hyperopia and total hyperopia ... eyewiki.aao.org/Peters ...
Hyperopia
https://eyewiki.org
Hyperopia may also be categorized based upon the outcome of noncycloplegic and cycloplegic refractions. Manifest hyperopia is determined with noncycloplegic refraction whereas Latent hyperopia is determined with cycloplegic refraction. The magnitude of hy
Hyperopia
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
This latent hyperopia causes asthenopic symptoms without dimness of distant vision. Cycloplegia is a must to elicit the amount of latent hyperopia in children.
Refractive Surgery for Hyperopia
https://eyewiki.org
SMILE can theoretically be done safely in a higher degree of hyperopia than traditional LASIK, however SMILE is not FDA approved for hyperopia.
The Moving Target of Hyperopia
https://www.reviewofophthalmol
“Patients who are presenting for hyperopia are typically entering the presbyopic phase of life, or they have latent ... https://eyewiki.org/ ...
Understanding Latent Hyperopia
https://www.optometrists.org
Hyperopia (farsightedness), occurs when the eyeball is too short from front to back or the cornea's curve is flatter than usual.