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You are here: Home / Archives for Health Fitness and Beauty / Inflammatory bowel disease

Eye Digest – A Resource for Age related Eye Diseases

June 6, 2007 by Tricia

Do you suffer from an eye related disorder? If you don’t, more than likely someone that you know and love already does.

Whether it be the development and or worsening of near sightedness or far sightedness; or more serious conditions that develop due possibly to genetics, health disorders like diabetes, or even those caused by medications that we must take for other disorders, there’s a good chance that many of us will suffer the affects of the aging eye.

I wanted to take a moment to tell you about an excellent resource called The Eye Digest. The Eye Digest is a publication created by the University of Illinois Eye & Ear Infirmary and it contains a wealth of information about the effects of the aging eye and serious disorders that many affect your vision as you age.

I can honestly say that I believe this is an excellent resource for those that would like to learn more about vision, symptoms of vision disorders, eye care and the diseases that affect the eye. As a nurse, I am confident that the information provided on the Eye Digest is accurate.

Vision Basics

All of the articles that you’ll find within the Eye Digest are in depth, well researched articles. Along with full discussions of major eye disorders, you’ll see that there’s a section called Vision Basics where you’ll find information that discusses vision myths, nutrition and vision, flashes and floaters, 20/20 vision, the eye and medications that you might take and many other basic vision related data.

One of my favorite articles in the Vision Basics section is one that’s called “Did you ever wonder …” which contains answers to questions such as “why do I see spots after looking at a bright light?”, “why your nose runs when you cry”, “twitching eyelids” and many other interesting questions and answers about things that affect our eyes or vision on a regular basis.

Age Related Eye Diseases

As I started this article by saying, there are a number of serious aging eye related disorders that may affect us or our loved ones as we age. Here’s just a few facts from the front page of the Eye Digest:

The leading causes of vision impairment and blindness in the US are primarily age related eye diseases. Cataract affects nearly 20.5 million Americans age 65 and older. About 2.2 million Americans have been diagnosed with glaucoma, and another two million do not know they have it. More than 1.6 million Americans over age 60 have advanced macular degeneration. Diabetic retinopathy affects more than 5.3 million Americans age 18 and older. The number of Americans with age-related eye disease is expected to double within the next three decades.

Heredity, aging and diseases that affect the eye

My mother actually suffered from Macular Degeneration. She was lucky in that she never fully lost her vision, but she did lose quite a bit of her vision and it made life quite difficult for her in her later years. She also had late onset diabetes which added to her vision problems.

Eye disorders seem to run in my family. My mother was near sighted and my father was far sighted. Both of their vision disorders worsened as they aged, and my mothers vision problems were compounded by the onset of diabetes and macular degeneration. My siblings and I all have vision problems as well. There’s five of us and four have near sightedness and one is far sighted. I wouldn’t doubt that many of you reading this also have a family history of eye disorders.

I have Crohn’s disease which is an autoimmune disorder that also goes by the name of inflammatory bowel disease. Crohn’s can affect the eye in a number of ways, for most, it’s the medications that they take that cause eye problems – such as dry eye and glaucoma. Unfortunately I’ve had a form of iritis develop as a result of my Crohn’s disease. Iritis and Uveitis are one of the few eye disorders that do not seem to be discussed in depth, from a disease perspective rather than a medication related perspective, on the wonderful aging eye digest.

Considering that my family has a history of eye disorders, and that I have my own particular eye related problems, it’s in my best interest to learn more about eye disorders that might affect me as I age. It’s probably in your best interest to learn more about the aging eye, vision disorder symptoms and any preventative measures that you can take to protect and preserve your eyes health as you age too.

Age Related Eye Diseases

The Eye Digest has some of the most in depth information that I’ve found on the most common and often most serious vision problems that can affect people as they age. Large sections of the digest are devoted to providing informative articles on disorders such as Dry Eye, Cataract, Glaucoma, and one disorder that I worry might affect me later in life since my mother had it – macular degeneration, which can start out by causing a blurring or darkening of a persons central vision.

All of the articles and sections on these major eye disorders are accompanied by diagrams, charts and in some cases video. Each disorder discussed on the Eye Digest has a section which discusses the disorder, and others sections that discuss the symptoms of the disorder, eye exams which help diagnose the disorder and possibly prevent permanent vision problems if the particular disorder is caught early (glaucoma), medical and surgical treatments (if available), and new developments in the treatment and diagnosis of these disorders.

Additional information and resources

Along with major eye disorders the Eye Digest also discusses a number of other problems that affect the aging eye, and has a section on low vision and visual aids, aging eye answers, as well as links to other eye and vision related sites.

You’ll also find information on LASIK treatment too. Lasik is becoming a viable and more commonly used treatment for some vision problems, especially myopia (near sightedness).

In Conclusion

As you’ve likely guessed by now, I think this is an important topic as many of the diseases and disorders of the eye discussed on the Eye Digest could affect us or those whom we love as we age. If you are concerned about any vision related symptoms that you might be having, or know someone who has vision problems I strongly suggest that you visit and bookmark this site.

Please let others know about the eye digest if you feel that the information and articles on the site might help them.





Filed Under: Education, Family, Health Fitness and Beauty, Home and Lifestyle, Inflammatory bowel disease, Services, Website Promotion Tagged With: Age Related Eye Diseases, aging eye, aging eye answers, articles, autoimmune, autoimmune disorder, blind, blindness, blurred vision, blurring, cataract, central vision, charts, crohns, darkening, data, diabetes, diagrams, disorder, dry eye, Eye, eye and disease, eye and medication, eye and nutrition, eye answers, eye care, Eye Digest, Eye disease, Eye disorder, eye questions, Family, far sighted, flashes, floaters, genetics, glaucoma, Health and Fitness, health disorders, Health Fitness and Beauty, heredity, IBD, images, inflammation, Inflammatory bowel disease, information, iritis, lasik, late onset diabetes, life, links, loss of vision, low vision, macular degeneration, medical, medication, mother, myopia, near sighted, nurse, pain, permanent damage, permanent vision, prevent, resource, serious disorders, surgery, surgical, symptoms, treatment, University of Illinois Eye Ear Infirmary, uveitis, Video, vision, vision and aging, Vision disorder, vision problems, vision related site, visual aids

Just checking in

June 3, 2007 by Tricia

I’m sorry that I haven’t posted for a few days. That doesn’t happen very often. I guess, considering how frequently I normally post you could say my little break just balanced things out a bit.

I’ve been so ill. I was very sick for all of last week, but it got worse on Friday and to be honest I think today is the worst that I’ve felt in a long long time. I absolutely hate having Crohn’s disease.

I must have looked as bad as I felt yesterday because Chris actually told me that I looked bad. He never does that. It’s not just because he’s a nice husband. He is, but it’s because I seem to be one of those people that can practically be at deaths door and very few people will be able to tell just by looking at me just how bad I’m feeling.

This has been to my extreme disadvantage when seeing doctors or when I’ve been sick enough that I’ve had to go to the ER. The practice of medicine is both objective and subjective – you have to listen to what the patient is telling you, but you also have to listen to what your own eyes and observations are telling you. When you don’t look as sick as you are, you don’t always get the best care … well, at least up until all the blood work and other test results come in.

Anyway … I just wanted to check in and let you know I’m still here. I’ve got some posting that needs to be done, so you should see a few new articles on this site and some of the others that I run in the next few hours – including my Green Thumb Sunday posting.

Filed Under: Chronic Pain, Health Fitness and Beauty, Home and Lifestyle, Inflammatory bowel disease, Life with Chris Tagged With: Blogging, Chris, crohns, doctor, ER, frequent, Health and Fitness, Health Fitness and Beauty, Hospital, IBD, ill, Inflammatory bowel disease, looking sick, medical tests, not looking sick, not posting, pain, posting, sick, work

Losing my memory

May 29, 2007 by Tricia

Do you ever have those days when you can’t remember what you just did? I think I’m having one of those days … or well one of those moments.

My Crohn’s, as usual, is acting up again, and I’m in a lot of pain. A LOT of pain. One of the pain meds that I take I can take twice a day, every 12 hours. Well … I’ve been in pain all day, but it’s been worse since mid afternoon or so. I got caught up in my work though and forgot to go and take one of the pills. The last time I had taken one was at about 2 a.m.

I meant to take it earlier. Really I did.

So anyway, I just remembered and I walked into the kitchen to get one of the pills. I got distracted by my elderly neighbor in her yard hoeing the earth around her plants like she does three times a day. LOL

Then I went to the cupboard and I know I got out a Tylenol. I remember that. I’ve got a fever and I needed the Tylenol as well as a pain med. However, I think I took one of my mild short acting pain pills rather than my long lasting time released pain pills.

I can’t remember.

BTW it’s the pain that’s messing with my memory … not any other pain meds because I don’t have any other pain meds in my system. This will be the first that I’ve taken today … which is why I’m in so much pain.

I’m at least 90% sure that I didn’t open the small pill bottle and take out the long acting medicine. But … if I believe that and take one now and I’m wrong I’ll have two long acting pain pills in my system. It’s oxycontin so I don’t want to O.D. on it.

Short of gagging myself and bring up the pills I just took so I can discover what they were … what do I do?

Trust my vague memory that I did not take the pill I had wanted to take?

Or not take any chances and wait until 7 a.m. to take that pill again – 12 or more than 24 hours after the last one depending upon if I just took one or not?

The part of me that’s in pain says “take the pill, you didn’t take it.” and the nurse side of me says “don’t take a chance, wait.”

Filed Under: Chronic Pain, Health Fitness and Beauty, Inflammatory bowel disease Tagged With: crohns, crohns disease, did I or didnt I, distracted, fever, gag, Health and Fitness, Health Fitness and Beauty, IBD, Inflammatory bowel disease, kitchen, medicine, Memory, neighbor, nurse, pain, pain meds, take medicine, take pill

Hiccups

May 28, 2007 by Tricia

You know that woman that made the news this year because she’d had the hiccups for a year or so? Well … if that was me I would never have made it that long.

When I get the hiccups it’s painful. It always has been. Each hiccup gets stronger and stronger and hurts more and more. Now that I have Crohns it’s almost unbearable, and unfortunately I get the hiccups quite often. Whenever I eat a food that’s kind of dry in fact.

Chris came home from work a little while ago, and then he went out to the store to get some things that will help when we put the air-conditioners in the windows in a while and while he was out he stopped off at Tim Hortons and got me an Ice-Cap and a croissant.

Well … I started to eat the croissant and the hiccups started. Chris ran to get me a big glass of water, because water does help with my dry food related hiccups. However, as he neared me I had him put his hand on my stomach so that he could feel my guts rolling around with each hiccup. My insides, not just my diaphragm, seem to roll around when I get hiccups. Maybe I’ve got some scar tissue in there from the Crohns that makes this happen.

I feel sorry for that woman that’s had hiccups for so long. I really do. I know with mine, if I had them for more than a few minutes I’d be going nuts with the pain. I’d never make a whole year of hiccups without being sedated or something.

Do your hiccups hurt or are they just irritating?

Filed Under: Health Fitness and Beauty, Inflammatory bowel disease Tagged With: crohns, dry food, eat, Food, glass of water, Health and Fitness, Health Fitness and Beauty, Hiccups, hiccups for a year, IBD, Inflammatory bowel disease, insides move with hiccups, irritating, pain, painful hiccups, stomach, water

I’m dragging today

May 27, 2007 by Tricia

I’m sorry that I haven’t yet managed to do my Green Thumb Sunday post. I’ve got so much work to do today that it’s not funny!

Plus, the Crohn’s has reared it’s nasty head so I’m trying to do my work with a massively high fever and abdominal pain that I probably should, but won’t, go to the hospital about. I won’t go because I know it’s the Crohn’s and there isn’t much they can do for me, but put me on more meds and maybe hydrate me a little bit.

I’m sick of doctors, hospitals, appointments and medical tests. I’m sick of the pain too and not being able to eat more than a mouthful of food at a time. It can take me upwards of two to three hours to eat dinner sometimes. I take a few bits and then I have to take a break. By the time I’m about a half hour into a meal it’s getting pretty disgusting because the food is cold and uh often has a different texture than when it’s warm which turns me off the food even more, but you can only heat up a meal so many times before you destroy it that way too.

I think I’ll be lying down for about 24 hours once I’m done my work, and the Green Thumb Sunday post. I probably won’t be visiting any sites today, but if I feel better tomorrow I’ll visit some of my GTS and maybe Do follow people.

I hope my American friends are having a nice long weekend.

Filed Under: Chronic Pain, Dining and Restaurants, Health Fitness and Beauty, Home and Lifestyle, Inflammatory bowel disease, Recreation Tagged With: appointment, crohn, crohns, dinner, doctor, ER, fever, Food, friends, green thumb, Health and Fitness, Health Fitness and Beauty, Hospital, IBD, Inflammatory bowel disease, medical, pain, sick, sunday, visit, visiting

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