Six Smart Things College Students Should Do for Their Eyes This fall, a record 21.7 million students will attend a college or university in the United States. Many teens will be living away from home for the first time without mom or dad around to reinforce healthy habits, including how to care for their eyes. Before students head for the dorms, our Ophthalmologist at Scottsdale Eye Physicians would like to provide parents with college eye health tips to ensure their freshmen sons and daughters keep seeing 20/20 during school. While accurate vision plays a vital role in learning, college students can be susceptible to a host of vision and eye problems such as injury, infection and increased nearsightedness that can complicate life in and out of class. Crowded classes and dorms can serve as a breeding ground for infectious eye disease, while reading and computer use in school has been linked to poorer eyesight. Fortunately, there are many ways to avoid these and other eye issues on campus. Scottsdale Eye Physicians and Surgeons along with the American Academy of Ophthalmology, the worldâs largest association of eye physicians and surgeons, offers the following six tips for protecting eyes during college: Donât shower or swim in contact lenses. Acanthamoeba is a parasite that lives in water and can cause a rare but serious eye infection called Acanthamoeba keratitis. According to the CDC, 85 percent of Acanthamoeba eye infections occur in contact lens wearers, one of the main risks being exposure of lenses to water. To avoid this dangerous infection, do not wear contact lenses in showers, hot tubs or when swimming in lakes or pools. Also, never use water to clean or store contact lenses; only use sterile contact lens disinfecting solution and a clean contact lens case. Go outside. Scholastically-inclined students spend much of their time studying indoors, which can put them at risk of becoming more nearsighted, or myopic. A 2014 study found that more than 50 percent of college graduates are nearsighted, with eyesight worsening for each year in school. Other research shows that spending more time outdoors can protect vision from getting worse. Grab your books and head outside whenever possible. Wash your hands. Conjunctivitis, often called pink eye, spreads fast in schools and dorms. An outbreak struck more than 1,000 Ivy League college students in 2002. Avoid rubbing the eyes and wash hands with soap to avoid catching and spreading pink eye, not to mention other infections. Give your eyes a break. Nearly 80 percent of engineering and medical school students experienced symptoms such as dry eyes and redness, according to a study of students at one Indian university. To help avoid eye strain, follow the 20-20-20 rule: look at something 20 feet away every 20 minutes for 20 seconds. Because dry eye can also cause painful corneal ulcers, which are open sores on the front part of the eye, blink regularly and fully to keep eyes moist. Donât share makeup. Harmless as it may seem, sharing makeup is a surefire way to spread infection such as herpes keratitis among friends. Infection-causing bacteria grow easily in creamy or liquid eye makeup. Stick to your own makeup and throw it away after three months. If you develop an eye infection, immediately toss all of your eye makeup. Protect your eyes during the game. Nearly 1 in 18 college athletes will get an eye injury playing sports. Common injuries, like scratches on the eye surface and broken bones near the eye socket, happen most often in high-risk sports such as baseball, basketball and lacrosse. Athletes should consider wearing polycarbonate sports glasses to help keep stray balls and elbows from hitting their eyes. âFor many teens just starting college, taking care of their eye health may be the last thing on their minds,â said Rebecca Taylor, M.D., comprehensive ophthalmologist and clinical spokesperson for the American Academy of Ophthalmology. âBut the fact is that an eye injury or condition can affect their grades and social life, causing days or even a lifetime of poor vision. We hope that parents will remind their kids of these risks before they fly the coop this fall.â Get your kids into the eye doctor before they head off to school! Call 480-994-1872 to make an appointment today! This article reprinted with permission from the American Academy of Ophthalmology’s EyeSmartÂŽ program (www.geteyesmart.org).
The Importance of Regular Eye Exams and Screenings
As Scottsdale ophthalmologists, we urge our patients to have regular eye exams to maintain healthy vision. But do you truly understand the importance of regular eye exams? From 6 months old through your final years, every age, every race, and every gender needs to maintain regular eye exams. Why Do I Need Eye Exams? Even if you have no family history and have seemingly perfect vision, eye exams are still a necessity to evaluate your eyes for a variety of conditions, many of which are not hereditary. Children should have their vision checked at 6 months, 3 years and before first grade. Adults should see an eye doctor every 2 – 3 years. Seniors over the age of 60 should visit their eye doctor every 1 – 2 years. If you have diabetes or a family history of eye conditions, your eye doctor might recommend more frequent exams.
Find out why the Zeiss i.Profiler is a leader in eye exam Technology
At Scottsdale Eye Physicians & Surgeons, we strive to offer the best vision possible for our patients! With our new technology, the Zeiss i.Profiler and i.Scription, we can make that a reality. We now offer state-of-the-art eye exams with the i.Profiler. The first instrument based on innovative wavefront technology that precisely measures the vision profile of the eyes.  Because over 70% of our patients are suitable for the i.Profiler, it represents one of the most exciting developments in vision correction in the last decade. For over 150 years eye doctors have used a machine known as a phoropter to generate glasses prescriptions.  The phoropter only checks for three optical aberrations: nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism. The new Zeiss technology checks for those three, plus six other higher-order aberrations. This is done all without the patient having to answer the question, âwhich is better, one or two.â Patients being measured with the i.Profiler is the starting point for i.Scription technology. In less than one minute, this unique instrument measures more than 2500 reference points in your eyes.  The i.Scription provides a highly detailed analysis of your vision profile.  This detailed analysis allows your eye care physician to find your exact prescription. This prescription is then used to create Zeiss customized lenses.  These lenses will have a more exact match than any other lenses. You will quickly begin to appreciate the benefits of i.Scription lenses when you discover how much better you can see.  You will see colors more brilliantly and night vision will appear to have  fewer reflections or halos.  This makes for better overall vision. An added benefit of the Zeiss i.Profiler is that we can often obtain an accurate eyeglass prescription on a patient who is incapable of understanding directions during a traditional refraction.  These technology is very effective for patients who may have suffered a stroke victim, or patients with Alzheimerâs or dementia. Scottsdale Eye Physicians & Surgeons is one of the few practices in the state that offers Zeiss i.Profiler technology.  Next time you are in for an eye exam ask about the i.Profiler. To schedule an eye exam call our office at 480 994-1872 or schedule online!
Better Technology, Better Vision â i.Profiler and i.Scription
During your regular eye exams at Scottsdale Eye Physicians & Surgeons, we will run a variety of tests to determine the health and strength of your eyes and vision. During these tests you will undergo a refraction test, or a test to let your ophthalmologist know exactly what prescription you might need in glasses or contact lenses. As the ophthalmologists here at Scottsdale Eye are on the forefront of exam technology, we employ the Zeiss i.Profiler combined with Zeiss i.Scription lenses to provide our patients with the highest possible prescription accuracy. Refraction Tests Before i.Profiler Before the Zeiss i.Profiler, ophthalmologists would use a phoropter, or a very large, very bulky piece of equipment that is always associated with eye exams. This piece of equipment somewhat resembles a large mask, and is encompassed with multiple lenses to measure refractive error. The patient would sit behind the phoropter and provide the ophthalmologist with feedback based on which lenses gave them the best vision.