Diabetic retinopathy: prevention and treatment options
14/11/2024
07/11/2018
Hasn't everyone been bothered by light at some stage? When this situation is extreme, we call it photophobia, and it’s a symptom that has no call to be associated with any diseases.
When light hits the eyeball, it passes through the cornea, the transparent layer on the eye's surface, then it crosses the pupil and crystalline lens and lastly hits the retina. Any alteration to this optic system may mean that ambient light bothers us.
The eye's surface
The eye’s surface may suffer lesions of a traumatic, infectious or inflammatory origin. They cause this reflection which makes us close our eyes to shut out the light.
Wearing contacting lenses for longer than recommended may have a similar effect.
The iris and pupil
In the centre of the iris, the tissue that gives colour to our eyes, lies the pupil, and there are a few pathologies that bring about this symptom. Yet again, trauma, infections or inflammation may be the cause:
The crystalline lens and the vitreous body
The crystalline lens could also be responsible for photophobia, mainly because it becomes opaque as time passes. Although the crystalline lens is a transparent tissue, as the years go by it loses this property and cataracts appear. There are different types of cataract and, furthermore, they cause a wide variety of symptoms such as a loss of vision or glare. They are treated with cataract surgery.
With regard to the vitreous body, which is the liquid filling the eye, given its transparent nature, its loss may bring about this symptom, however, as per the retina, its pathology usually leads to other issues.
In general, treatment for photophobia is related to its cause; using glasses with lenses suited to the sun and other filters is the most common procedure.