|
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Cindy
I'll call the clinic and get his name and
what days he's at the clinic by me tomorrow morning.
He
is at the nearby clinic two days a week I think and if you decide to
call it a may as well be a day he is in the clinic. I'm almost certain
his name is spelled Dr. Larocos, but I'll get that. I don't know why
Joseph's vision would be affected by lack of oxygen. His eyes would of
been developed already. Cataracts should show filmy on his eyes? This
is why I'm thinking a short call to an eye specialist may give you some
ideas or even rule some things out.
katie
A Complete Picture Visual information from the retina travels from the eye to the brain via the optic nerve. Because eyes see from slightly different positions, the brain must mix the two images it receives to get a complete picture. What
we think of as seeing is the result of a series of events that occur
between the eye, the brain, and the outside world. Light reflected from
an object passes through the cornea of the eye, moves through the lens
which focuses it, and then reaches the retina at the very back where it
meets with a thin layer of color-sensitive cells called the rods and
cones. Because the light criss-crosses while going through the cornea,
the retina "sees" the image upside down. The brain then "reads" the
image right-side up. I went hunting for an explination
of how the eye and brain must be in sink in order to see, didn't find
much helpful but Cindy does Joseph have other
issues that make him different, that would not be effected by the
vision problem.
" Lets talk about our wonderful little friends! Join today! "
SPONSORED LINKS
YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
|

