Posted in Glasses

Went for my eye test today

Sunglasses on and masked up for the bus and then appointment, had a walk, got on the bus into town in the first time like forever. The buses have have stopped coming up my side of the village at the moment due to our Covid situation.

So off I went to the appointment at Boots at their opticians.
A limited amount of customers were allowed in. You can’t just turn up. You have to have an appointment which you give your name to the staff member once inside.
Straight upstairs, you talk to another member of staff who was cleaning down the 2 machines that you have before your eye test. Distance and back of eye photography.
I saw the image of my eyes on the screen. I asked the optician if she could see my Macular dystrophy and she pointed out the middle of the screen which had a charcoal like smudge/fog on both eyes. Left eye just in the middle. Right eye, big patch in the middle and extended to and around the peripheral edges. Top to bottom.
She says my right eye is far worse than my left. Understandable. As this is where the blank spot seems to be and the black blob at nightime.
I’ve haven’t seen a photograph of my eyes since my first consultation at the eye hospital in 2015. They last time I went, the computer was down and he had to go to another room to view the images. I didn’t understand enough even a few years ago to be bothered to ask to see them. I wouldn’t have probably wanted to know or see it. I’m now excited to see the results of my Autofluorescence test when I go to hospital again. As it is a more advanced specialist machine than the opticians.
I’m so impressed that the opticians now have retinal photography. So, many eye conditions and other health problems can and will be picked up sooner.
Anyway, There is hand sanitiser you can use freely. Then you go wait and see the optician who is aproned up, and masked.
My prescription has changed as I thought it had, so stronger lenses for me. They have said they will be thick, but at this point I’m past caring.
My last change of reading glasses was a year ago. So she’s said that they will put me down for eye tests yearly. If I need them sooner, just to ring.
Eye test done. Back downstairs then, to chat about what your needs are and a look at glasses with a masked staff member, you keep your mask on too.
I showed her my screenshots of the glasses I liked. She brought them to me.
I had already picked out some glasses online so I didn’t have to spend any longer in there than I had to. Not necessarily for me, but for the staff. As they have to come into contact with so many people each day. They also have to clean each pair you touch, everytime.
Tried them on, got reflective lense coating too to try and give my peepers and me a fighting chance.

Tortoiseshell… #standard.

Now just waiting on the lenses being made to be popped in the frames then I was given the option to pick them up by appointment if I always needed them adjusting or posted to me. I chose them to be posted as they don’t usually need to be adjusted.
My eyes now are in pain because of the bright prism light the optician used to look right to the back of my eye.
Painkillers help so it doesn’t turn into an ocular migraine and a literal pain in the neck.
Cannot praise the Boots staff enough.
I’m going to keep getting glasses as long as they give me even the slightest help. They don’t solve wavy lines and blank patches. But they do help me with giving me the chance at reading anything at all.
Posted in Before Diagnosis, Glasses, Hospital Appointments

How my Macular dystrophy was diagnosed

How I was diagnosed with Macular Dystrophy.

The first time I had an inkling something was wrong before my diagnosis, In my case, it wasn’t a big fancy opticians, wasn’t a specialist. The answer may surprise you ☺.

After suddenly finding myself not being able to read the newspaper one day, and only being able to read the headlines, after being completely fine the week before. It was whilst I was shopping in Asda that I saw they had an opticians in store.

Years ago I had been to specsavers, because I felt I needed an eye exam as I hadn’t had one for years. The dystrophy would have been in there, but wasn’t found.

I had my eye test and she explained that my macular was thin for my age. This needed looking at. She referred me to the eye centre there and then.

I went to that appointment. Had the tests beforehand, then went to see the consultant that explained I had Macular Dystrophy and was born with this condition.

So, there you go.

If you are worried about your eye health in anyway, best get yourself an appointment to be on the safe side as you never know what’s happening and sight is taken for granted.

Thank you to the lady who referred me that day, it set in motion a diagnosis for me.

Posted in Glasses

Booked an eye test

hand holding a mobile phone with Boots Optician web page on screen

Booked my eye test today.

Important to keep my sight going and eek out any help or improvement I can.
How I see it is… I’ve aways had this condition, even when I was growing inside my Mother, so I’m not mad at my eyes. They haven’t let me down. If anything they have let me do things and experience life independently for alot longer than most.
Alot of people with this condition don’t have that luxury. It shows itself to them when they are kids, so having later onset macular dystrophy is remarkable.
It isn’t anything I’ve done. Won’t have done anything different from those people who have difficulties from a very early age. Just luck of the draw I guess.
Will be interesting to see if the deterioration I know is there, means a different prescription. Whilst the ophthalmologist can detect the changes from me reading the Snellen chart, what can’t be considered by them is the tiny blind spot that makes C into O, E into an F etc.
All depends on where the spot has shifted. Whether I’m stressed, tired, been reading or too much light in my eyes.
I’m sure if I went to have an eye test everyday. There would be a different result from one day to the other.
There will be a time when the grey/black blob and the blindspots will overtake my current situation. But as for now, my good old eyes are hanging on in there… sort of ☺