Understanding Your Prescription

A Center for VisionCare
4418 Vineland Avenue, Suite 106
North Hollywood, CA 91607
818/762-0647
Alan I. Mandelberg, M.D.
Donald I. Goldstein, M.D.
Understanding Your Prescription
familiar vision problems
Over half the population of the United States experiences one or more common visual acuity problems.
Generally, people with visual acuity problems are nearsighted, farsighted, and/or have astigmatism.
Collectively, these conditions are medically referred to as Lower Order Aberrations. Lower Order
Aberrations are usually corrected by wearing glasses, contact lenses or by laser vision correction.
If you've seen the vision prescription your optometrist or ophthalmologist prepares following an eye exam,
you've probably seen a series of positive or negative numbers, one for each eye. These values are known
as diopters, and they typically measure the refractive power of your eyes on a scale of -14 to +14. A
person with 20/20 vision without glasses will most likely have a reading of zero diopters. A person with
myopia or nearsightedness would have a negative diopter value; a person diagnosed with hyperopia or
farsightedness would have a positive diopter value. Regardless of whether the number is negative or
positive, a higher number indicates a higher refractive error. Your prescription specifies just how much
vision correction is required to correct your particular vision problems.
To understand these refractive errors, compare the information and illustrations below of an eye with good
visual acuity with a myopic (nearsighted), hyperopic (farsighted) or astigmatic eye.
Good visual acuity
What you've probably always heard is true: the human eye does work like a camera. The light and images
we see pass through the cornea at the front of the eye. The light and images then go through the lens
inside the eye, and, finally, focus directly onto the retina, at the back of the eye. The retina sends the
"signals" to our brain, which registers them.
Poor visual acuity is primarily caused by refractive errors. These errors occur when the cornea is shaped in
such a way that the images we see do not focus directly on the retina.
Nearsightedness (Myopia)
When you're nearsighted or myopic, images in the distance will seem blurry. Your eyes may be longer
than normal or the cornea may be too curved, so images focus in front of the retina.
Farsightedness (Hyperopia)
When you are farsighted or hyperopic, images that are near (the words on a page, for example) appear to
be more blurry than images in the distance. Your eyes may be too short, or your cornea too flat, so
images focus behind the retina.
Astigmatism
Astigmatism results in a blurring of all images, whether near or far. Here, images focus on more than one
point in front of, or behind the retina. The result is that all images, whether near or far, may be blurry. In
mixed astigmatism, symptoms of myopia or hyperopia are combined, resulting in the overall inability to
see images clearly.
Other common vision problems.
Presbyopia, another familiar vision problem, is different from any of the problems discussed above. A
physiological weakening of vision due to the natural aging process, presbyopia is the reason many people
require reading glasses from the time they reach middle age. Since presbyopia reflects a problem with the
eye's lens, and not its cornea, it cannot be corrected by LASIK or other types of corneal vision surgery.
A Center for Vision Care Understanding Your Prescription
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