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---not specifically for this condition but i do know

 

there are certain head and neck exercises which can help with vision

obvuiosly nutrition plays a part

and water intake

 

I am sending you this information so that you may evaluate it,

properly and share this information with your people.

Helpful vision information on prevention and alleviation

 

 

For research purposes only

Maintaining and improving vision naturally

From my own observations a certain degree of eye massage/stretching

has been most beneficial to helping with vision .i Have noticed much

faster focusing and a feeling of having the eyes much freer .

Usually I start massage around the eyes/eyebrows and over the closed

eyes using the three fingers this done for about 2-3 mins using a

firm touch. Next using both hands I stretch the skin by almost

parting it across the eyes , attempt to stretch the muscles all

around the eyes. Pushing quite firmly push one eyebrow up and with

the other hand push the other one down. Then without any hands close

one eye and keep the other open aim to keep the open eye wide

open, then circle the open eye 3 times one way then 3 times the

other keeping the other eye closed all the time. Then do the other

eye.

Then we work the eyebrows keeping one eye closed raise the opposite

eyebrow and hold it there for a few seconds really stretch it, then

reverse ie do the other eye .This can be most amusing done in the

mirror and gives a good impression of one eyed jack out of treasure

island.

Then we work the eyes more, really stretch the eyes open as far as

they will go and hold for a few seconds then squint tightly

together do this for about 3 times .With both eyes look left without

moving your head and hold for 5 seconds the look right for 5

seconds .All the way up for 5 seconds and down for 5

seconds .Finnish off with a nice palm rub gently over both eyes .

 

Simple Eye-exercises by Dr Williams:

 

 

1. Place the palms of your hands against the orbits of your eye

[the palms shouldn't touch the eyeball, only the bony area around

it].

 

Apply enough pressure so that you have total darkness in both eyes.

Keep your eyes closed and covered. Look up as far as you can.

 

Now look straight ahead.

Then look as far as you can to the right and go back to the center.

 

Now look straight down as far as you can and back to the center.

Now go all the way to the left and back to the center.

 

2. Hold a pencil straight out in front of you at arm's length.

Focus both eyes on the tip of the pencil.

 

Slowly bring the pencil in toward your face,

keeping your eyes focused on the tip until it touches your nose.

 

Now slowly move the pencil back to arm's length, still focusing on

the

tip.

Try to keep the tip in focus at all times.

 

As your eye muscles become stronger, this exercise will get easier.

 

3. Hold a pencil at arm's length and look straight ahead at all

times.

Do not move your head during this exercise.

 

Slowly move the pencil upward

until you can no longer see the point with your peripheral vision.

 

Now move it slowly back down to center--keep focusing--

and all the way to the right until you can no longer see the point,

and back to the center.

 

Then go all the way down until you no longer see the point,

bring it back up to the center

and do the same thing going to the left and back to the center.

Also edgar cayce said that the neck and had exercises would be

beneficial

Rolling the head around slowly one way then the other

Looking left and hold and right and hold

Up and down slowly

Side to side slowly

 

 

From the Orion project

http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/seventhmoon/orion/

 

The World's No.1 Science & Technology News Service

 

Eye correction is seriously short sighted

19:00 20 November 02

 

Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition

 

Millions of people worldwide may have worse eyesight and even be

more likely to go blind because of a long-held but misguided idea

about how to correct short-sightedness. A study intended to confirm

the theory has instead been stopped because the children's eyesight

was getting worse, New Scientist has learned.

Decline in eyesight

For decades, many optometrists have been routinely " undercorrecting "

short-sightedness, or myopia, when prescribing glasses or contact

lenses.

 

" What was done was done with the best of intentions, " says

optometrist Daniel O'Leary of Anglia Polytechnic University in

Cambridge, England. Indeed, his study of 94 children in Malaysia

sought to prove the value of undercorrection. Instead, it showed the

opposite.

 

While the number of children involved was small, amazingly it is the

largest and most rigorous study to date. " The study was meant to run

for three years but after two years, when we found out we were

making the children's eyes worse, we had to stop it prematurely, "

O'Leary says. " Short-sighted people need to know it's not the thing

to do. "

 

The results have been hailed by some optometrists as key evidence

that could change the way children are treated. " It's the strongest

evidence I've seen in this field, " says Paul Adler, a spokesman for

Britain's College of Optometrists. " It could change prescribing

practice worldwide. "

 

 

Epidemic proportions

There is still much debate about the causes of myopia, but it is

certainly common in children who spend a lot of time reading or

doing close work. It has reached epidemic proportions in Far Eastern

countries such as Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong, where 90 per cent

of young people are short-sighted, compared with 15 to 30 per cent

in Europe and the US.

 

 

Short-sighted theory

In short-sighted people, the muscles in the eye cannot flatten the

lens enough to focus light from distant objects directly on the

retina. Instead, the point of focus is in front of the retina,

creating a blurred image (see graphic). Glasses can fully correct

this problem, moving the focal point back onto the retina.

 

But when people wearing normal glasses look at close objects, the

focus point is usually behind the retina. The theory is that to try

to " refind " this focal point for near objects, their eyeballs

actually elongate. Not only does this make distance vision even

worse, it also increases the risk of serious eye diseases such as

retinal detachment, glaucoma and retinopathy, all of which can lead

to blindness.

 

According to this theory, undercorrection should help stop the

eyeball elongating. When they undercorrect, optometrists prescribe a

lens that focuses light from distant objects just in front of the

retina, rather than exactly on the retina.

 

 

Children and chicks

 

 

Yet the only proof that it works comes from a study of just 33

Japanese children in 1965, and from studies on chicks in the 1990s.

And these studies have since been attacked as lacking rigour or

relevance.

 

In their trial, O'Leary and his colleagues at the National

University of Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur, undercorrected the sight of

half the children and fully corrected the rest. Then they measured

the length of the eyeball with ultrasound every six months. To their

surprise, they found that the eyeball elongates faster when vision

is undercorrected.

 

As a result, the team reports in a paper that will appear in Vision

Research, on average the vision of the 47 children with

undercorrected myopia deteriorated more rapidly than those given

full correction (see graph). Yet full correction has long been out

of fashion. " I had to go back to 1938 to find someone in the

literature saying a full correction should be made, " O'Leary says.

 

The explanation for his results, O'Leary speculates, is that the eye

cannot tell whether the focal point is in front of the retina or

behind it. It just grows backwards if the image is out of focus -

which means that not wearing glasses might be even worse than

undercorrection. " Any blurred vision will make myopia worse, " he

says.

 

 

Demolishing assumptions

Related Stories

 

 

Short-sightedness may be tied to refined diet

5 April 2002

 

Eyeball squeezing could correct sight

21 March 2002

 

Severed optical nerves can be made to grow again

5 December 2001

 

 

For more related stories

search the print edition Archive

 

 

 

Weblinks

 

 

Optometry, Anglia Polytechnic University

 

British College of Optometrists

 

Eye development

 

Myopia

 

Vision Research

 

 

 

Adler thinks this is a key conclusion that demolishes previous

assumptions and could help optometrists develop better treatments in

the future. Other researchers, however, think further studies are

needed to prove that any kind of blurred vision makes myopia worse.

 

Undercorrection could be bad for adults as well, O'Leary thinks,

although any decline is likely to be slower than in children. His

findings suggest that generations of people worldwide could have

somewhat worse eyesight because of the popularity of

undercorrection.

 

The reason is that vision research is not a priority in Europe and

the US, O'Leary says. " Studies have been few and far between. It's

hard to get funding for myopia research in the West. "

 

O'Leary's message to doctors, patients and parents is

unequivocal. " No glasses is the worst option of all, " he says. " But

don't undercorrect. Go for full correction. "

 

 

Andy Coghlan and Michael Le Page

 

The World's No.1 Science & Technology News Service

 

 

 

Short-sightedness may be tied to refined diet

 

 

11:40 05 April 02

 

Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition

 

The food children eat might play as big a role as books and computer

screens when it comes to causing short-sightedness.

 

Diets high in refined starches such as breads and cereals increase

insulin levels. This affects the development of the eyeball, making

it abnormally long and causing short-sightedness, suggests a team

led by Loren Cordain, an evolutionary biologist at Colorado State

University in Fort Collins, and Jennie Brand Miller, a nutrition

scientist at the University of Sydney.

 

The theory could help explain the dramatic increase in myopia in

developed countries over the past 200 years. It now affects 30 per

cent of people of European descent, for example.

 

" The rate of starch digestion is faster with modern processed breads

and cereals, " says Brand Miller. In response to this rapid

digestion, the pancreas pumps out more insulin. High insulin is

known to lead to a fall in levels of insulin-like binding protein-3,

the team points out.

 

That could disturb the delicate choreography that normally

coordinates eyeball lengthening and lens growth. And if the eyeball

grows too long, the lens can no longer flatten itself enough to

focus a sharp image on the retina, they suggest.

 

 

" Overnight epidemics "

" It's a very surprising idea, " says James Mertz, a biochemist at the

New England College of Optometry in Boston. But it's plausible, says

Bill Stell of the University of Calgary in Canada. " It wouldn't

surprise me at all. Those of us who work with local growth factors

within the eye would have no problem with that - in fact we would

expect it. "

 

Metz's institution is now planning studies in animals. But there is

already evidence to support the theory. While fewer than one per

cent of the Inuit and Pacific islanders had myopia early in the last

century, these rates have since skyrocketed to as high as 50 per

cent. These " overnight epidemics " have usually been blamed on the

increase in reading following the sudden advent of literacy and

compulsory schooling in these societies.

 

 

 

 

Related Stories

 

 

Eyeball squeezing could correct sight

21 March 2002

 

Severed optical nerves can be made to grow again

5 December 2001

 

A lens implant that changes focus could make cataract patients'

eyesight almost as good as new

27 June 2001

 

 

For more related stories

search the print edition Archive

 

 

 

Weblinks

 

 

Biochemistry, University of Sydney

 

Eye development

 

New England College of Optometry

 

Acta Opthalmologica Scandinavica

 

 

 

But while reading may play a role, it does not explain why the

incidence of myopia has remained low in societies that have adopted

Western lifestyles but not Western diets, says Cordain.

 

" In the islands of Vanuatu they have eight hours of compulsory

schooling a day, " he says, " yet the rate of myopia in these children

is only two per cent. " The difference is that Vanuatuans eat fish,

yam and coconut rather than white bread and cereals.

 

The theory is also consistent with observations that people are more

likely to develop myopia if they are overweight or have adult-onset

diabetes, both of which involve elevated insulin levels. The

progression of myopia has also been shown to be slower in children

whose protein consumption is increased.

 

Journal reference: Acta Ophthalmologica Scandinavica (vol 80, p 125)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

phil

 

 

In , " Sara " <nurturinghome

wrote:

>

> does anyone knows any info about curing myopia?(short sightdness

that is

> -7?)

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sara mom to 3 kiddos

> work at home united <http://workathomeunited.com/sara>

> http://workathomeunited.com/sara

>

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