There is a treatment for visual dyslexia. She cites a patient named Albert as an example. When he came to see Dr. Cynthia, he was failing in school. He also didnt want to read and had a mild red-green color perception anomaly. Alberts mom had to transfer him to another school, a special school so he could function well. Deep in her heart though, she knew there was something else that needed to be solved because Alberts intelligence quotient was above average and his mom knew in her heart that he was an intelligent boy.
When he was examined for visual dyslexia, findings show that the cause for confusion and interchanging of letters came from his tendency to get cross-eyed whenever he reads letters that are near. He also had low contrast sensitivity and unfixed eye reference. Because of what the examination revealed, he was prescribed special reading glasses that prevented his eyes from getting crossed. A special yellow tint in the lenses helped improve the contrast of the print he was reading. Dr. Cynthia patched his one eye to help Albert develop a good eye reference and avoid confusing and crossing letters. After the treatment, Albert was able to go back to mainstream school and now has managed to be one of the top four students in his regular class. Amazing, isnt it?
Dr. Cynthia encourages parents not to take for granted visual problems in their children. Its not true at all that if a child passes vision screening and is able to see clearly, he does not have visual problems. She reminds parents that Vision tests determine how children see at a distance. When one says, "I have 20/20 vision," he means that he is able to see the smallest test letters at a distance of 20 feet. When a child studies his lessons, he must look at letters much nearer than 20 feet. Those routine eye examination tests do not include tests for near, especially if the patient is younger than 35-40 years old.
Its one thing to be a true dyslexic, its another to have simple visual dyslexia. We learn something new every day.
Dr. Cynthia del Mundo is an optometrist, a pediatric optometrist and an orthoptist. She holds clinic at CHBC, St. Lukes Medical Center. Together with husband Jade, Dr. Cynthia spearheaded the multi-specialty Headache Care Center on West Ave., Quezon City. She can be reached through the following numbers: 0917-5255-254 and 723-0101 local 5905.