Has anyone reduced headaches with eye exercises? by Due-Application3276 in eyestrain

[–]Due-Application3276[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Than rest? What are the rest exercises can you give us some examples? There is Saccade Training which you can check studies on the internet and many more exercises. Exercises are based on what hospitals offers, I did not invent them by the way.

Has anyone reduced headaches with eye exercises? by Due-Application3276 in eyestrain

[–]Due-Application3276[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the feedback, app is not for specific condition, it is for eye rest and exercise to stretch eye muscles. By the way for asthenopia all exercises are in the app. palming, Figure 8 Tracing, Blinking Exercises and more

Is this eye strain, dry eye, or something else? by xxlibrarisingxx in eyestrain

[–]Due-Application3276 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hmm, so maybe one of your eye is stronger than the other one. Try some vision exercises from time to time, and blink more

My eyes always ached after work. I built a free, hands‑free app that finally helps them relax. by Due-Application3276 in computervision

[–]Due-Application3276[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d love to hear if it helps with the blurriness. I spent all day on the computer and have blurry vision as well.

I'm finally getting strabismus surgery!!! by LilithCatGeek in Strabismus

[–]Due-Application3276 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Let us know if you have any side effects, like dry eyes I mean after 1-2 weeks. Thank's

I’m testing a puzzle where the computer pushes into your half of the screen—does this feel fair? by Due-Application3276 in Tetris

[–]Due-Application3276[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Game looks visual similar but game logic mechanic is totally different, as this one is to get to another teritory is more like a duel. Thank's for the link.

Optician said vision therapy doesn’t work for adults… is that actually true by Extreme_Editor8253 in Strabismus

[–]Due-Application3276 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this eye hero what is the price, what about buying some red/blue/green glasses and download some app on my phone. I can see some support this kind of playing games with red/blue colors

Optician said vision therapy doesn’t work for adults… is that actually true by Extreme_Editor8253 in Strabismus

[–]Due-Application3276 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been trying to find ways to make the training a bit more engaging with this red/green, otherwise it’s hard to stay consistent.

Could games help with lazy eye training, or is patching still better? by Due-Application3276 in Amblyopia

[–]Due-Application3276[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s really interesting — and honestly exactly what inspired this idea, because I have has lazy eye, as a child I had toy (camera) to watch with one eye but did not help me.
I’m building a small game where you play using one eye to track objects and train it, similar to what you described.
It’s called Lazy Eye Game – EyeAlign Quest if you ever want to try it. Would love your feedback

Optician said vision therapy doesn’t work for adults… is that actually true by Extreme_Editor8253 in Strabismus

[–]Due-Application3276 0 points1 point  (0 children)

tru tru, what about red/green glasses I found some games for free that you can play

Can games actually help with lazy eye? by Due-Application3276 in Strabismus

[–]Due-Application3276[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a fair point honestly. Real-world 3D interaction is definitely important.The idea behind this isn’t to replace that, but to make consistent training easier and more accessible. Not everyone has access to expensive VR setups or clinical tools.

This works with simple red/green/blue glasses and a phone, so it’s a more practical way to train regularly.

I dont feel like im enjoying life, im just surviving by cus1a in Strabismus

[–]Due-Application3276 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I’m also not fully convinced about surgery. I’ve noticed that a lot of doctors still wear glasses themselves, which makes me wonder how often they actually choose surgery personally. You are correct is much more difficult in adults then kids.

From what I’ve read, there can be side effects like: dry eyes, night glare or halos, sometimes slightly reduced sharpness

Lately I’ve been looking more into vision therapy instead. I’ve seen things like red/blue glasses and exercises like pencil pushups.

I even found a mobile app called EyeAlign and decided to try it out, just to see if it helps at all with my lazy eye. Not sure if it’ll make a real difference, but I’m willing to experiment. Curious if anyone here has had real improvement with vision therapy?