This is referring to the fact that your daughter's prescription is
different for each eye. I'm curious as to what her prescription is?
Depending on the difference, you might be better off going to an
optician for the lenses and maybe ordering just the frame online. If
it's over 4.00 diopters difference, you definitely want to go to an
optician. And generally people with a significant amount of
anisometropia tend to do better with contact lenses, so you might want
to look into those for your daughter.

"Match base and center" is the optometrist's recommendation that the
base curve of each lens and the optical center be the same - sometimes
these are set differently for each lens by the optician based on the
level of anisometropia.

Marc
JustEyewear.com

On Dec 23, 11:14 am, mikey <[email protected]> wrote:
> My daughter had her eyes examined and came back with the typical
> prescription and some extra info.
> At the bottom it said:
> Recommendations:
> Aniso match base and center
> AR coat
>
> I can figure the AR coat means anti-reflective.
>
> What does Aniso match base and center mean?  Aniso might be short for
> anisotropic.  I read the definition of Anisotropic but that didn't
> help.

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