
overview
- Insufficient convergence is a condition in which your eyes cannot work together when looking at nearby objects. This condition causes one eye to rotate outward rather than inward with the other eye, creating double or blurred vision.
- Convergence failure is often diagnosed in school-age children and adolescents. This can lead to reading difficulties that parents or teachers may suspect that the child may have learning difficulties rather than an eye condition.
- People of all ages can be diagnosed with a lack of convergence following a concussion or traumatic brain injury. Convergence insufficiency Treatment in Nizamabad
symptom
Not all people with poor convergence have signs and symptoms. Signs and symptoms occur while reading or doing other work nearby and may include:
- Tired, sore, or uncomfortable eyes (eye strain)
- a headache
- Difficulty reading – words seem to float on the page, lose your space, or read slowly – which can prevent you from reading or fail to do your homework
- Double vision (diplopia)
- Difficulty concentrating
- Squint, rub, or close one eye
The reasons
The cause of the convergence failure is unknown, but eye misalignment occurs when focusing on nearby objects. Misalignment affects the muscles that move the eye. Usually one eye drifts outward when you focus on a word or object at close range. Convergence insufficiency Treatment in Nizamabad