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Myopia

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Myopia
Classification & external resources
ICD-10 H52.1
ICD-9 367.1
DiseasesDB 8729
MeSH D009216
Image:Fileisnotcorruptedactuallyupload3453405.jpg
The same view with myopia. (Camera lens was adjusted in a way to physically simulate myopia.)
Image:Myopia.svg
Compensating for myopia using a corrective lens.

Myopia (from Greek: μυωπία myopia "near-sightedness"[1]), also called near- or short-sightedness, is a refractive defect of the eye in which collimated light produces image focus in front of the retina when accommodation is relaxed.

Those with myopia see nearby objects clearly but distant objects appear blurred. With myopia, the eyeball is too long, or the cornea is too steep, so images are focused in the vitreous inside the eye rather than on the retina at the back of the eye. The opposite defect of myopia is hyperopia or "farsightedness" or "long-sightedness" — this is where the cornea is too flat or the eye is too short.

Mainstream ophthalmologists and optometrists most commonly correct myopia through the use of corrective lenses, such as glasses or contact lenses. It may also be corrected by refractive surgery, such as LASIK. The corrective lenses have a negative optical power (i.e. are concave) which compensates for the excessive positive diopters of the myopic eye. In some cases, pinhole glasses are used by patients with low-level myopia. These work by reducing the blur circle formed on the retina.

Contents

Classification

Myopia has been classified in various manners.[2][3][4]

Etiology

Borish and Duke-Elder classified myopia by cause:[3][4]

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