I want to know about hypermetropia
Answers
Explanation:
Hyperopia, or farsightedness, is a common vision problem that primarily affects children.
Your eyes focus light rays and send the image of what you’re looking at to your brain. When you’re farsighted, the light rays don’t focus like they should. The cornea, the clear outer layer of your eye, and the lens focus images directly on the surface of your retina, which lines the back of the eye. If your eye is too short, or the power to focus is too weak, the image will go to the wrong place, behind the retina. That’s what makes things look blurry.
Hyperopia often runs in families. But lots of children who get it from their parents outgrow it.
Answer:
A person with hypermetropia/hyperopia or long sight can see clearly objects far away from them, but not close to them. This is caused by the shape of the eye - the eyeball is slightly too short. It is corrected by spectacles or contact lenses with lenses which are 'plus' or convex in shape.
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