The latest addition to the playlist came one recent afternoon when I looked up and thought I had a strand of hair or an eyelash in front of my left eye. After I brushed and attempted to clear it away, I re-opened my eye. The strand was still there. Rubbed again and re-opened. Still there. I looked up and down, side to side.
The strand, which appeared to be a couple of small, squiggly, blurry lines, moved in whatever direction I focused. Didn’t impede my field of vision or clarity. Just a small bother, something that hadn’t been there minutes earlier.
Initial anxiety gave way to a research rabbit hole of eyesight conditions – cataracts, glaucoma, macular degeneration – and where I learned that the term “floaters” doesn’t apply solely to fecal matter.
As we age, the gel in our eyes can congeal in small spots or strands. They cast shadows on the retina, the light-sensitive layer of tissue at the back of the eye, and those shadows appear as “floaters” in our vision. They’re more noticeable in light-colored settings, say if you’re looking at a clear blue sky or white paper.
“Floaters” are fairly common past age 60, according to the National Institute of Health’s National Eye Institute, and sometimes will clear up on their own. However, they can also be a signal of more serious conditions. Multiple websites recommend reaching out to an optometrist ASAP for further testing.
As it was the weekend and the local eye doc’s office was closed, me and my floaters were left to the Intertoobz, where I Google’d my way to all sorts of grim outcomes – invasive surgeries, eye patches, lengthy recoveries, vision loss.
First thing Monday morning, I went to the doc’s office, told the receptionist what was up and asked if I could make an appointment. She checked the schedule book and said, if you can wait a few minutes, we can see you now. Huge score.
Within an hour an assistant and an optometrist examined my eyes and were far more encouraged about my situation than I was when I walked in the door. No tears or ruptures. Vision is good. No treatment required. Come back in a couple months for a follow-up.
The clinical term for my condition is Posterior Vitreous Detachment. Over time, the vitreous gel that fills the eye begins to liquify and shrink, pulling away from the retina, and can cause floaters or flashes (streaks of light, usually at the side of vision field). According to the American Society of Retina Specialists, if PVD progresses gradually and uniformly, symptoms are mild. Approximately 85 percent of people who experience PVD never develop complications, and in many cases floaters and flashes subside within three months.
In the days after my exam, the floater has become a small, blurry oval that mostly bears left and that actually has a name among the retina crowd – a Weiss ring, named for the doctor who first described it in 1990. Again, field of vision and clarity are fine, which isn’t always the case, as people can experience multiple floaters or they can appear as cobwebs or dust or a swarm of insects and greatly interfere with eyesight. For me, it’s a tolerable peculiarity and one more descriptor on an old guy’s resume’.
Glad it’s trending in the right direction.
ReplyDeleteAs for age conveyance-I was born on the day Bob Wills died, and two days before the Buckingham / Nicks era of Fleetwood Mac commenced.
i watched the challenger explode in sophomore english class
ReplyDeleteif one were so inclined, he could watch footy from noon until 9:00 pm this evening. start with inter miami/psg, roll into uswnt/ireland, then catch the second half of canada/guatemala as a prelude to usmnt/costa rica. and if one was a real sicko and had mls season pass, he could close the day with lafc/vancouver at 9:30. but that'd be nuts.
ReplyDeleteThe wife and I and some other friends are going to see Slightly Stoopid at an outdoor venue on the water this afternoon/evening. I don’t really want to go because A. I don’t care about Slightly Stoopid -they’re fine B. It’s going to be hot as hell and C. It’s a Sunday evening and I’d prefer to be sitting in my pool and relaxing. But, a friend of ours recently beat throat cancer and this is his celebratory wish so Slightly Stoopid on a Sunday night it is.
ReplyDeleteIs sound slightly less stoopid when you put it in context like that.
ReplyDeleteI have been digging the Peter Green era of Fleetwood Mac recently.
ReplyDeleteUpdate on Slightly Stoopid. It’s been pouring here all day so I may get out of this yet. We’re at a bar near the venue but I’m not sitting in the rain for this.
ReplyDeletegood luck with the eyes, dave!
ReplyDeletemy mom keeps telling me to get early cataract surgery? right when they start developing. i don't want to . . . and i certainly can't watch that much soccer.
disc2 of the bruce tracks is worth a listen.
chatham, new jersey's own john tolkin took the fifth penalty tonight for the usmnt against costa rica's legendary keeper, keylor navas. navas came out to try to intimidate the much shorter tolkin, who walked towards navas and reversed the intimidation. total jersey move. would've been all the better if tolkin had made the kick to send us through, but we won it on the next kick, so all's well.
ReplyDeleteMr KQ, I feel about the Peter Green era of Fleetwood Mac as I do the Peter Gabriel era of Genesis. It’s skilled and artsy but just not as fun and catchy as the latter day stuff after they left. For better or for worse. “Albatross” is cool and “Black Magic Woman” was good enough to be made truly great by another. Not sure what else is there I’d like, I trust you that it’s worthy.
ReplyDeletePeter Green era had some great three guitar stuff. That’s usually one too many, unless you have really good players. And they did.
ReplyDeleteThe latter incarnation is more or less like the rhythm section joined a different band.
Noted, Rootsy. The LS Three Guitar Army was another exception to that rule, in a big way.
ReplyDeleteanaheim ducks selected center roger mcqueen with the 10th pick of the nhl draft over the weekend. mcqueen has chosen jersey number 95, same as lightning mcqueen of 'cars' fame. i am very approving of this whimsy.
ReplyDeleteKachow
ReplyDeletesqueaky's doing it up on the grounds of wimbledon. ahoy, polloi!
ReplyDeleteI would've gone with number 20 for Steve McQueen but not everyone is man enough for that.
ReplyDelete#1 pick Matthew Schaefer is going with jersey #1 because Schaefer Beer was known as "the 1 beer to have when you're having more than 1"
ReplyDeletetaylor fritz working overtime to escape the squeak mush
ReplyDelete