Symptoms of congenital hyperopia in clinical practice

  The clinical manifestations of congenital hyperopia. When identifying a disease, our first step is to observe the clinical manifestations of the disease. Hyperopia is one of the more common modern eye diseases. When identifying a disease, our first step is to observe the clinical manifestations of the disease. Congenital hyperopia is one of the more common ophthalmic disorders in modern disease. In order to better identify the disease of hyperopia, today, we are studying the clinical manifestations of congenital hyperopia.  In order to obtain a clearer image, patients with congenital hyperopia need to adjust their vision, whether they look far or near, and the strength of the adjustment is closely related to their age and health condition.  (1) Mild hyperopia occurs in adolescence and is also called latent hyperopia because of strong accommodation and normal vision both near and far.  (2) In moderate and high hyperopia, some patients have normal distance vision but poor near vision, while others have abnormal distance and near vision, so it is also called dominant hyperopia.  (3) As patients grow older, their adjustment power decreases and their near and distant vision decreases, with the near vision decreasing more obviously and the phenomenon of early flowering appearing.  (4) In young patients, due to prolonged excessive adjustment spasm, the refractive power of the eye is temporarily strengthened, making the hyperopic eye appear ortho-optic or myopic, the latter being called pseudomyopia.  2. Visual fatigue Visual fatigue is the main conscious symptom of hyperopia patients, which is manifested by blurred vision, swelling and pain in the eyeball, orbit and brow arch, and even nausea and vomiting, especially in reading or close work, and the symptoms are reduced or disappeared after a short rest.  3, congenital hyperopia patients use too much regulation is inevitably accompanied by too much collection, thus producing a regulatory internal strabismus, the higher the hyperopia of one eye in the internal oblique position.  The lens is basically normal in size and the anterior chamber is shallow. The eye is small in highly hyperopic eyes. The optic papilla is small, red, unclearly marginal, slightly elevated, similar to optic papillitis or edema, but the corrected visual acuity is normal or no change compared to the past, no change in the visual field, no change in the long-term observation of the fundus, called pseudo-optic papillitis.  5. Patients with vision are often accompanied by chronic conjunctivitis, blepharitis or blepharitis .  These are some of the common clinical symptoms of congenital hyperopia. Through the study of this article, we will have a deeper understanding of hyperopia, which will help us to detect the arrival of hyperopia earlier; it will also help us to better differentiate it from similar diseases of hyperopia. This will be of great significance in the treatment of hyperopia.