Quote:
Originally Posted by Krystian Galaj
I'm 33 years old, so I assume no aging changes yet.
I have -4.50 on both eyes, so I wear glasses. Aging changes would shift that to +, actually inmproving my eyesight.
1. I can't watch anything on brightly lit monitor, or TV in a dark room. If I try, I get splitting headache in 10 minutes, latsing for hours. Reading from backlit PDA or iPhone screen at night, in darkness does the same thing, even if the PDA is set to minimum brightness, and with yellow letters on a black background.
...
Do the results of such experiment as the one I just described matter anything to you? Well, they matter to me, more that any bullshit from talking heads with many titles does. It's my head and my headache after all.
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Maybe you should listen to the
talking heads:
"Light Sensitivity: Sensitivity to bright light occurs normally during extremely sunny conditions or when coming out of a dark environment into bright sunlight. Such sensitivity can also be caused by drugs used to dilate the pupils (mydriatics). However, pain resulting from bright light (photophobia) can be a symptom of a migraine headache or a number of eye disorders, for example, those that involve inflammation or infection within the front part of the eye (uveitis), a corneal disorder (such as keratitis), or an eye injury. It may also be due to meningitis (which is also typically accompanied by a severe headache and neck stiffness).
Doctors first try to differentiate light sensitivity from photophobia. The cause of light sensitivity or photophobia can usually be determined by the person's symptoms and an eye examination. A slit lamp examination is particularly useful for detecting disorders that cause photophobia. Light sensitivity and photophobia can be minimized by protecting the eyes from light (for example, by using sunglasses). When photophobia is the result of inflammation within the eye, dilating eye drops can help to relieve pain."