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  2. Cyanopsia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyanopsia

    The primary causes include post-cataract surgery, certain medications, and, less commonly, neurological or ophthalmological conditions. Post-cataract surgery is a common cause, as replacing the natural lens with a synthetic one increases exposure to blue light, leading to temporary blue-tinted vision. This effect usually resolves as the eye adapts.

  3. Shilajit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shilajit

    Shilajit or mumijo, Mohave lava tube, 2018. Shilajit (Sanskrit: शिलाजीत; lit. ' conqueror of mountain ', 'conqueror of the rocks'), salajeet (Urdu: سلاجیت), mumijo or mumlayi or mumie [1] is an organic-mineral product of predominantly biological origin, formed at high altitudes of stony mountains, in sheltered crevices and cave.

  4. List of systemic diseases with ocular manifestations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_systemic_diseases...

    There are many diseases known to cause ocular or visual changes. Diabetes , for example, is the leading cause of new cases of blindness in those aged 20–74, with ocular manifestations such as diabetic retinopathy and macular edema affecting up to 80% of those who have had the disease for 15 years or more.

  5. Vision disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vision_disorder

    Such movements can cause irritation and fatigue to the eyes. [9] Glaucoma: occurs when the optic nerve is damaged and can result in irreversible vision loss, with the potential to pass undetected until this damage occurs. It is caused when aqueous humour fails to adequately drain from the eye, resulting in pressure build-up. [10] Keratoconus ...

  6. What losing vision in one eye helped me understand about ...

    www.aol.com/finance/losing-vision-one-eye-helped...

    In one of the better-known examples, the rhesus macaque became the go-to model for polio researchers, but unlike humans, the animal was not orally susceptible to the virus; it only developed polio ...

  7. Monocular vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monocular_vision

    Monocular vision impairment refers to having no vision in one eye with adequate vision in the other. [2] Monopsia is a medical condition in humans who cannot perceive depth even though their two eyes are medically normal, healthy, and spaced apart in a normal way. Vision that perceives three-dimensional depth requires more than parallax. In ...

  8. Amaurosis fugax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amaurosis_fugax

    Obscured vision due to papilledema may last only seconds, while a severely atherosclerotic carotid artery may be associated with a duration of one to ten minutes. [6] Certainly, additional symptoms may be present with the amaurosis fugax, and those findings will depend on the cause of the transient monocular vision loss.

  9. Elton John reveals 'limited vision in one eye' caused by ...

    www.aol.com/elton-john-shares-severe-eye...

    The 77-year-old singer shared healing is "an extremely slow process" as he waits for sight to return to one of his eyes but is "feeling positive." Elton John reveals 'limited vision in one eye ...