Color Blindness

 
 
nearsighted vision
 
farsighted vision
 
astigmatism
 
presbyopia
 

Is Your Sight Blurry?

Find out If You Have One of These Common Conditions Above

 
Did You Know?
Did you know about 7% of men have some form of color blindness?
Yes
No

What is it?

Color blindness, also known as daltonism, is a deficiency in the view of certain colors. Our retina is made up of rods and cones, which act as color and light receptors. Each of the millions of cones are made up of 3 more receptors: red, green and blue. When functioning correctly, we can see all types of color; color blindness occurs when there is a problem or lack of a color receptor in the cones. Red/green color distortion is the most common type of color vision impairment. In a few very rare cases, some people can only see in black and white shades.

What causes it?

Color blindness is almost always an inherited condition although males are more likely than females to get it. Cones in our eye contain red, green and blue pigments. When there is damage to one of the cones or a cone is missing some of the pigment, color blindness occurs.

Symptoms

  1.   inability to distinguish colors (usually red/green and sometimes yellow/blue)  

The photo below to the right shows an example of someone who confuses red and green. To such a person, reds and greens are indistinguishable and may appear the same.

normal vision
a person who confuses red and green

Treatment

For some color blind people, special contacts can help with color vision. Unfortunately, there is not a treatment to completely cure color blindness.

Index of Diseases

Albinism (Albino)
Color Blindness

Computer Vision Syndrome

Hordeolum (Styes)
Hyperopia (Farsightedness)
Lag Opthalmos
Phthiriasis Palebrarum
Styes (Hordeolum)

 

 

 

 

 


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