My son is 2 and a half years old and has severe hyperopia of both eyes. Prescribed corrective glasses +4.5. The child also has a slight squint. Is hyperopia in a child completely recoverable?
Hyperopia is not a disease but an individual feature of a given eye. It cannot be cured, but chances are good that it will decrease as you get older. With such a high power of the lenses there is little chance of completely compensating the defect.
Remember that our expert's answer is informative and will not replace a visit to the doctor.
Iwona Grabska - LiberekOphthalmologist, postdoctoral doctor of medicine, head of the Ophthalmology Clinic and head of the Clinical Department of Ophthalmology at the Medical Center of Postgraduate Education in Warsaw. From 2016, the president of the Polish Ophthalmology Society.
More advice from this expert
Astigmatism [Expert Advice]Short-sighted astigmatism [Expert Advice]Lack of binocular vision [Expert advice]CRS [Expert Advice]Dark spot on the eye [Expert's tip]Black dot [Expert's tip]Do glasses improve eyesight? [Expert advice]Fuchs Dystrophy [Expert Advice]Astigmatism Correction [Expert's Advice]Strabismus treatment costs [Expert's advice]Laser correction and age [Expert's advice]Laser vision correction [Expert's advice]Smaller eye on a newborn [Expert's tip]Hyperopia in a child [Expert's advice]Amblyopia in a child [Expert advice]Dropped eyelid [Expert advice]Deterioration of vision [Expert advice]Eyeball Transplant [Expert Advice]A fleeing eye [Expert's tip]Lens Injury [Expert Advice]Removal of strabismus [Expert's advice]Is the removal of strabismus an operation or a procedure? [Expert advice]Eye defect - amblyopia [Expert's advice]Laser treatment - retinal detachment [Expert's advice]Disturbances in the field of vision [Expert's advice]Cataract [Expert's Advice]Zez [expert's tip]Alternating squint [expert's advice]Occasional strabismus [Expert advice]Strabismus in a 9-month-old child [Expert's advice]