Whether or not you have strabismus can be determined from your own symptoms, but a definitive diagnosis needs to be made after a medical examination.
Strabismus is a condition in which the eyeballs of both eyes are skewed to varying degrees when they are looking at each other. If you stand in front of a mirror and look at the eyeballs of both eyes through the mirror, and if one eye is looking straight into the mirror while the other eyeball is tilted to the outside or the inside, it means that there is strabismus. Once strabismus occurs in the eyes and is not corrected in time, there may be an abortive decrease in visual acuity, or even amblyopia may develop.
If you suspect the existence of strabismus through self-judgment, it is recommended to go to the ophthalmology department of a regular hospital as soon as possible to complete a series of examinations, such as refractive examination, binocular visual function examination, eye movement examination, eye position and oblique angle of vision, etc., so that professional ophthalmologists can make accurate judgments based on the results of the medical examination and take corrective measures in time in order to avoid the loss of visual acuity.