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Eyestrain and headaches are also among the most common complaints
of patients visiting the optometrist. Asthenopia is a synonym for eyestrain and
it involves any feeling of fatigue, discomfort or pain localized in or near the
eyes or thought to be associated with the use of the eyes; oftentimes reported
by patients as headache, especially when the ache is localized near the eyes or
is thought to be caused by the use of the eyes.
A patient visiting the optometrist with headache as the chief
complaint has self-diagnosed the headache as being caused by a visual problem.
Eyestrain headaches generally accompany prolonged use of the eyes.
It could also occur in the morning after prolonged use of the eyes, as an
"eye hangover" headache. Most patients come complaining with
eyestrain headaches having experienced the headache problem for a matter of
weeks and months but not years; as the pain is not so severe that the patient
is driven to find the cause within a few days, but it is usually persistent
enough that he eventually seeks relief from the problem.
It could be traced to
a change in jobs or other changes in the patient's visual requirements.
Eyestrain headaches tend to be of "medium" intensity and
"dull" in character; as opposed to "sharp", "burning"
or "boring", and tend to be located in the eyebrow region or in the
area around or behind the eyes. If prolonged use of the eyes gives rise to
excessive muscular tension, the pain maybe located in the back of the neck or
in the occipital or vertical regions.
Some authorities have attempted to relate headache location and
severity to specific refractive and binocular vision anomalies (e.g. hyperopia,
hyperopic astigmatism, convergence excess, hyperphoria, aniseikonia).
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The
important thing is for the practitioner to establish that the headache occurs
with the use of the eyes, and not to match up symptoms with findings, then to
determine whether the correction of the patient's refractive error or binocular
vision problem will solve the headache problem. Complaints of eyestrain or
visual fatigue by myopic patients are rare, because for an uncorrected myope
accommodation would not improve distance visual acuity. However, myopes squint
(using the lids) to cut off peripheral rays and allows the central rays to
enter the pupil producing a finer image. This can cause eyestrain or headache.
On
the other hand, uncorrected hyperope or hyeropic astigmat can improve his/her
visual acuity at distance by accommodating, precipitating asthenopia; usually
relieved by prescribing the appropriate lenses. Some patients’ eyestrain headaches could be solved by the
correction of as low as 0.50D of hyperopia or hyperopic astigmatism.
Prescription of placebo lenses for patients with little or no refractive error
usually had temporary relief after which the symptoms returned.
Optometrists should be well acquainted with the common headache
types, as many patients who believe their headaches are caused by eyestrain may
have headaches due to other causes. A large proportion of headaches are
vascular. Specific types of vascular headaches tend to occur based on age, i.e.
migraine headaches usually occur in young adults; hypertension headaches occur
in middle-aged and headache caused by temporal arthritis occur in elderly
patients. Other types of headaches of importance to optometrists are muscles
contraction headaches, cluster headaches, nasal sinusitis headaches and
trigeminal neuralgia- caused headaches. These types of headaches will be
further discussed in our subsequent post.
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