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Orientation and Mobility Evaluations and Instruction. 
Trading as: International Orientation and Mobility, LLC.
This is a private practice servicing local and international O & M contracts all over the world.  We fly anywhere in the world. We can quickly complete evaluations, assessments, supply the information and make the recommendations you need for your programming objectives or placement, and more importantly we can provide the  instruction your client needs for safe Orientation and Mobility!

We are Orientation and Mobility Specialists, Certified ACVREP, COMS, Evaluation and Instruction SERVICES.  Serving anywhere in the world.   email: EMAIL.COM.  Available Immediately!

Low Vision and Visual Rehabilitation Service

Low vision, a collective term for vision loss that cannot be reversed by glasses, medication, or surgery, is one of the major areas of research and treatment at the Wilmer Eye Institute. The work has led to novel solutions for some patients. Those with vision impairment suffering from macular degeneration (a disease that damages the center of the retina, called the macula) and other vision problems receive detailed visual-function testing, evaluation and rehabilitation.

At the Low Vision Rehabilitative Service, a multidisciplinary team of doctors and rehabilitative specialists works closely with the patient, family, friends and the referring doctor to assist an individual in regaining function lost by visual impairment. This typically includes addressing vision issues causing problems with reading, driving and activities of daily living. Home visits and other services provided by our occupational therapy staff outside of the Low Vision office are limited to a maximum of 60 miles round trip and within the State of Maryland.

A typical low vision evaluation involves a functional assessment including a low vision refraction and prescription of magnifiers, telescopes and assistive technology as appropriate. In addition, visual skills training such as eccentric viewing and blindness skills are provided as are referrals to comprehensive blind rehabilitation centers. The low vision service does not have minimum vision requirements, but works with all patients who have functional impairment due to an eye disease or condition.

For specific information, click on the following links:

Clinicians & Research Faculty

Contact Information & Locations

Patient Information & Forms

Conditions Typically Seen By the Low Vision Service

Information About the Lions Low Vision Fellowship

Information About the Implantable Miniature Telescope

Samantha Bale

Community Outreach Coordinator

http://www.alcohol.org/

 

 

 

 

Conditions Typically Seen by the Low Vision Service

I am a Certified Orientation and Mobility Specialist (ACVREP) graduating with my master's degree from Boston College and an undergraduate degree in Special Education, certified K – 12 Teacher of the handicapped. I have trained children and adults with visual impairments in every settings. I have also trained individuals with multiple disabilities giving me direct experience in evaluating people and their ability to use a public bus. I also have many personal experiences with people who are visually challenged giving me the experience needed to work with people with disabilities. I have conducted over 2,000 in-person assessments.

   

Orientation and Mobility for Working-Age Adults (O & M)

Orientation and mobility (O&M) is an exciting discipline in low vision and blind rehabilitation that teaches people to travel safely, efficiently and independently in their environment. Orientation is the process of mentally organizing the environment and determining one’s location within that environment. Mobility is the act of moving through the environment in a safe and graceful manner. An orientation and mobility specialist teaches people who are blind or visually impaired to travel by:

assessing an individual’s current travel-related skills, discussing goals, and helping her/him select a program of instruction that will allow for achieving the greatest travel potential
teaching people to travel by using their hearing, remaining vision, and other senses
teaching people to use a long cane for travel and to establish and maintain orientation while traveling.


O&M specialists work with people across the lifespan: from infants to senior citizens. The majority of clients on an O&M instructor’s caseload tend to have some remaining vision. It is also common to have clients with additional disabilities such as traumatic brain injury, hearing impairments, physical impairments, or cognitive impairments.

There has been a national shortage of orientation and mobility specialists for several years. Individuals willing to relocate generally have little difficulty in finding employment. O&M specialists may work in schools, at agencies for the blind or visually impaired, at Veteran Administration (VA) Medical Centers, and at universities and colleges. Many O&M specialists, after gaining experience in the field, contract to schools and agencies as part of their own private practice.

Orientation and mobility is a profession of highly trained, caring individuals who are committed to providing the best service to each client and who are committed to a professional code of ethics. Many professionals in the field are members of the Association for Education and Rehabilitation of the Blind and Visually Impaired (AER) and are certified by the Academy for Certification of Vision Rehabilitation and Education Professionals (ACVREP) which are professional organizations that govern the field.

 

New Requirements for Low Vision Rehabilitation Demonstration Billing

We will travel to North Central and South Jersey, New York City, Westchester, Hudson Valley and Upstate New York as well as Eastern, Central, and Western Pennsylvania.  We will travel internationally as well.

This site is under construction.  Our objective is to supply every O & M related document, and or information available to the consumer here.  Anyone may contribute to this objective.  Send your article or information as an attachment toEMAIL
 

Performing a Low Vision Evaluation By William K. Van Cleave

www.abo-ncle.org/themes/default/assets/images/.../van_cleave.pdf
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A Low Vision Evaluation is an in-depth functional evaluation to determine if ... a small assortment of clip-on jeweler's loops, clip-on near telescopes in 2.5x, 4x, ...

By Bruce P. Rosenthal, OD, FAAO

The low vision examination has evolved from a series of independent procedures into a structured evaluation. Each part of the sequential examination provides the clues that will help in determination of the low vision device and provide insight into apparent success or lack of success with a low vision aid. The structured examination includes the current methods in the determination of visual acuity at distance and near with the ETDRS charts and functional testing techniques including the Amsler grid, contrast sensitivity testing, and the Brightness Acuity test. An understanding of the importance of the various components of the low vision evaluation will enable the examiner to prescribe the appropriate low vision device, including spectacles, hand magnifiers,stand magnifiers, telescopes, absorptive lenses, video-magnifiers, optical or nonoptical devices, or refer for other service or additional testing procedures.

photo of an exam

The foundation for the present day low vision evaluation was set in 1935 by Dr. William Feinbloom in the monograph An Introduction to The Principles and Practice of Sub-normal Vision Correction. The elements of the subnormal vision evaluation or low vision evaluation, as it is known today, included a detailed case history, ophthalmometry, ophthalmoscopy, slit-lamp, visual field test, static retinoscopy, subjective examination at distance with "simple lenses," subjective examination at distance with sub-normal vision device, and subjective examination at near with subnormal vision device. A second visit was scheduled to establish the patient's prognosis, confirm the subjective and objective evaluation, and verify the objectives set forth in the case history. This was followed by selection of the optical device, training with the device, and prescription of the low vision aid. The monograph is also noteworthy in the discussion of the psychology of the low vision patient and the importance of illumination.

It took another 30 years before Dr. Gerald Fonda covered the basics of the low vision examination in The Management of the Patient with Subnormal Vision. He outlined the examination procedures as the history, testing of visual acuity at distance and near, retinoscopy, keratometry, subjective testing, and prescribing a reading prescription.

Dr. Eleanor E. Faye, however, was the first low vision clinician to discuss the importance of understanding the pathology during the low vision evaulation. In The Low Vision Patient, she discussed the basic eye conditions related to subnormal vision. She further underscored the relevance of the pathology to the management of the low vision patient with a functional classification of eye disease in Clinical Low Vision. And for the first time functional testing procedures, such as the Amsler grid, became part of the low vision evaluation.

The sequence of the low vision examination became further standardized in Low Vision Care by Dr. Edwin B. Mehr and Dr. Allan N. Freid. They were also instrumental in elaborating on the significance of the psychology of the low vision patient and the success-oriented examination. Other applicable additions to the low vision examination included color vision testing, response to illumination, and a systematic approach to near testing.

Dr. Jay Newman further clarified the low vision evaluation, while The New York Lighthouse Low Vision Continuing Education Program formalized, revised, and organized the structured low vision examination to what is essentially the accepted format of the low vision evaluation. A sequential low vision examination insures a higher rate for success as well as predicts difficulties encountered with the low vision patient.

Low Vision Basics

The basic low vision examination consists of the history, visual acuities, external evaluation, keratometry, subjective and objective evaluation, predicting the add, functional testing, selection of the appropriate low vision aid, instruction, and prescription or loan of the low vision aids.

The examination begins with a history which provides clues not only to the prescription of low vision devices but to any further services that may be required, such as medical counseling, mobility, rehabilitation and training, educational support, or surgical intervention. Among low vision clinicians there is a philosophical difference as to whether the case history should be taken before the low vision evaluation by means of a questionnaire sent home, by a social worker before the low vision evaluation, or on the day of the examination by the low vision clinician. Although a list of questions answered before the low vision examination may seem to expedite matters, it does not provide the answers to many questions that are obtained through direct observation or interaction with the patient. More importantly, face-to-face contact begins to establish a meaningful doctor patient patient doctor relationship. The patient may begin to relax and feel more confident in the fact that the doctor is taking the time out to listen to his or her complaints. Through the eye-to-eye contact, the patient often will realize that this doctor is interested in his or her vision problem.

At the outset it is usually best to let the patient relate the course of his or her visual changes, medical procedures, medications, surgeries, or their feelings without interruption (within a reasonable amount of time). This generally will relax the patient, lets them know you are interested in their visual history, and sets the tone for the examination. Because the majority of low vision patients are accompanied to the examination room by a friend or relative, it is also not unusual to obtain information from them when the patient is unresponsive or is sketchy about details. Conversely, the examiner must give the patient the chance to provide the answers, not the one who accompanied the patient. It also may be necessary to either ask the friend or relative to refrain from answering for the patient or on occasion ask them to take a seat in the waiting room. The examiner must be in full control so the examination can proceed in an orderly and time efficient manner.

The examiner then can structure and guide the patient into distinctive areas such as eye, medical, social, and educational history. Specific distance, near, and intermediate objectives, lighting needs, glare sensitivity, and mobility also should be explored.

By the completion of the case history, the clinician should have an impression of the patient's objectives and goals, whether or not they are realistic, the patient's reaction to the vision loss, and discern how much time to spend with the patient. That is, the examiner should sense what can and cannot be covered during the initial evaluation without fatiguing the patient.

Visual Acuity Measurements

Visual acuity measurement, the first test of visual function, follows the case history. The Feinbloom number chart was the first such distance visual acuity chart developed for the evaluation of the "partially blind," as the condition was originally was called (now known as the partially sighted). The chart is filled with optotypes ranging in size from a 700- foot to a 20-foot sized number. Individual pages consist of one to seven numbers. The first chart, however, that Feinbloom found suitable for the low vision patient was the B&L H591 Snellen chart (later known as the B&L AMA rating chart) placed at 10 feet instead of the traditional 20-foot test distance. This became the standard low vision test distance for over 50 years. This chart had optotypes ranging from 200- to 109- foot letters on one side and 97.5 to 20.0-foot letters on the other. The Lighthouse distance visual acuity charts were introduced with optotypes based on Sloan letters. The testing distance was generally 10 feet (recorded in feet) with the patient walking toward the chart or the chart brought toward the patient when the largest line could not be seen. The visual acuity was then recorded as the smallest line seen (e.g., 10/160), hand motion (HM), counts fingers (CF), light projection (LPROJ), light perception (LP), or no light perception (NLP). Counts fingers and hand motion was viewed by many clinicians as an inaccurate method of recording functional visual acuity and is generally no longer accepted by low vision practitioners.

The low vision visual acuity charts in use were not standardized. For example, there was unequal difficulty for each line or page on the eye chart, unequal spacing between letters, chart construction with one to 13 letters on a line, and various style optotypes, including serif and sans serif.

Dr. Jan Lovie and Dr.Ian Bailey, rectified the chart confusion by designing a new type of eye chart. The new chart, which was based on a logarithmic progression became the basis for the Ferris Bailey chart used in the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS).

Procedure With the Distance Acuity ETDRS Chart
The rear illuminated Ferris-Bailey ETDRS visual acuity charts are designed to be used at 4, 2, or 1 M. They are available in three randomly arranged letter charts, a number, HOTV, and Landolt C configurations. Visual acuity can be noted in the metric, Snellen, or LogMar systems with this chart. Visual acuity is taken without correction at 4 M in the right eye with the left eye occluded and repeated for the left eye with the right eye occluded. Binocular visual acuity is also taken. The chart should be moved in to 2 M or even I M when the top line cannot be seen. Correction is to be used in cases with significant refractive error such as high myopia or aphakia. The examiner also should instruct the patient in viewing eccentrically during the taking of visual acuity. This procedure introduces the patient to the techniques of eccentric viewing while also demonstrating that the vision may improve if the fixation changes from a central to eccentric area.

Peeking, unintentional though it may be, frequently results in misleading visual acuity measurements. The examiner should therefore closely watch the patient's eyes even when the eye is covered with a paddle occluder or clip-on occluder (e.g., Halberg, Bernell).

Recording of visual acuity is noted as test distance over letter size in meters. Visual acuity, for example, is noted as 4/20-2, 2/32-1, or 1/40. To find the 20-foot Snellen equivalent, multiply the numrator and denominator by 5,10,or 20 for the 4-,2-, and 1-meter test distances. The Designs for Vision number chart is still of value in estimating visual acuity less than 1/40 (20/800). When acuity falls below that which can be recorded on standard eye charts, the examiner should test for light projection, light perception, or no light perception. The upper range for successful visual rehabilitation with low vision optical devices is 1/40. Cogenital or determined low vision patients, however, often succeed with low vision aids when the visual acuity falls below this range.

Incoming Near Visual Acuity Recording

The objectives of the near visual acuity test are to determine the visual acuity as well as the habitual working distance. The later is often indicative of uncorrected refractive error.

Using the Lighthouse "GAME" card and recording the acuity in M notation, the instructional set given to the patient is to read the smallest word at their normal reading distance using the habitual reading correction. Again, visual acuities are taken with the right, left, and both eyes. The Lighthouse "NUMBER" card can be used as well as the Designs for Vision Near Reading Cards for the Partially Sighted. Test distance and card used should be noted on the record.

Careful attention should be paid to illumination. Adjustable lamps for reading should be readily available. Conversely, the examiner should also note whether decreased illumination enhances performance.

External Examination

The external evaluation, which follows visual acuity measurement, should include pupillary position, size, and responses, and position of the lid, eyes, and orbits and nystagmus. It is important to note any change from either the previous status or the information provided on an incoming eye report.

It is also important to take note of any information that might provide clues on the prescription of low vision devices. For example, large sector iridectomies might be the cause of a complaint of photophobia, whereas unequal pupillary positions might influence the type and position of a telescopic lens.

Carefully note the monocular pupillary distance and any height anomalies in the position of the pupil. As previously pointed out, this information will be of value in the positioning of any telescope.

Transillumination is always to be performed in suspected cases of albinism and differential diagnosis. However, transillumination also should be done when the decrease in visual acuity is not always explained by the findings presented from the low vision evaluation.

Keratometry

Keratometry is an objective finding that should be performed on the initial evaluation even when nystagmus is present. It should be performed after corneal and especially cataract surgery since the amount of cylinder, and axis of the cylinder, may shift over time.

Keratometry is also an important technique in establishing the integrity of the cornea. For example distorted mires might indicate the development of keratoconus, irregular astigmia, while a flat cornea might be indicative of micro-ophthalmus.

Keratometry is also an especially useful procedure for estimating astigmatic error in the nonverbal patient or child.

Static and Subjective Findings

Static retinoscopy is preferably performed with a wide aperture trial lens using a trial frame or by over-refracting with a Halberg type clip. In addition to the standard retinoscopy techniques, the examiner should use radical and off-axis retinoscopy. That is, move in when a poor or no reflex is seen, or until some motion is detected. Move the retinoscope off the line of sight to see if a reflex can be obtained. This is especially useful in high myopia or individuals with small pupils.

Subjective evaluation is also generally performed with the retinoscopic finding placed in the trial frame. The bracketing lenses are dependent on the incoming acuity. For example, the bracketing lenses used with an incoming acuity of 4/40 (20/200) is ± 1.00. This is derived by taking denominator of the Snellen fraction and dividing it in half. The bracketing lenses for acuity of 2/40 (20/ 400) would be ± 2.00, while the lenses used for 1/40 (20/800) would be ± 4.00. If the acuity improves during refinement, for example, from 4/40 to 4/20 (20/100), the bracketing lens should also be changed to ± .50 because the sensitivity is increased to smaller lens changes.

Predicting the Add

One of the keystones of the low vision evaluation is predicting the add. This information will be used in the selection of the low vision aid such as spectacle, hand magnifier, stand magnifier, or telescope.

Placing a +2.50D lens over the best distance subjective distance correction, in either a trial frame or Halberg-type clip, hold the Lighthouse Near Visual Acuity Test Chart (Modified ETDRS with Sloan Letters, second ed. at 40 cm. Viewing the chart monocularly, read the smallest line and record the acuity in M notation. Repeat the procedure with the left eye and with both eyes. If the 8 M line can not be read, place a +5.00D lens in the trial frame and read the smallest line with the chart held at 20 cm. Note the dioptric power necessary to read 1 M print under the column, denoting 40-cm or 20-cm test distance.

Sum the predicted add to the subjective refractive correction. For example, a -10.00 myope reading 4 M would require a + 10.00D lens to read 1 M. This could be achieved by removing the distance correction when reading. The same individual reading 8 M would require a +10.00 D correction lens (A +20.00 D add). Conversely, an aphakic patient with a prescription of +14.00 = -2.50 X 90 reading 4 M would require a starting lens of +24.00 = -2.50 X 90. The same individual who could only read 8 M would need a lens of +34.00 = -2.50 X 90, while the emmetrope reading the same 4 M would need a +10.00 add.

The add predicted with the ETDRS chart is single-letter high-contrast visual acuity. Proceed with either the Lighthouse Continuous Text Card for Adults for Near Vision or children) to determine reading acuity. This card, which contains sentences from 8.0 to 4.0 M on one side and 3.2 to 0.4 M on the other is used at a 40 cm with a +2.50 add. The predicted add is generally higher with reading then single-letter acuity.

Additional tests of visual function should follow the prediction of the add. These tests include the contrast sensitivity test, Amsler grid, brightness acuity test, and visual fields.

Contrast Sensitivity Testing

Contrast sensitivity testing with the Vision Contrast Test System is done at 1 M with the best corrected distance subjective and a +1.00 add (for absolute presbyopes). The patient should be instructed to look at the four bottom patches on the chart while the examiner demonstrates that the patches contain either lines going up and to the left, up and to the right, straight up, or the patch is gray. Pointing to each patch, the patient should demonstrate the direction of the lines with his hand. Proceed to the next line when the patient reports that the patch is gray or they are incorrect. Guessing should be encouraged.

The contrast sensitivity is done monocularly and binocularly with the recording done on the sheet provided for the 1- test distance.

The information provided by the contrast sensitivity test often will helpful in determining monocularity verses binocularity, increased need for illumination, necessity for occlusion, the need for control of brightness and contrast, and the need for a higher than predicted add.

Amsler Grid

Hold the Amsler grid at 33 cm. With the best distance correction and a +3.00 add, note the responses monocularly and binocularly. Variations include using the Amsler grid containing diagonal lines for fixation.

The Amsler grid can also be used for a quick determination of a severely constricted visual field. By introducing a 3-mm wand from the periphery, with the patient fixing the central dot, the examiner will be able to determine fields as small as 1 degree.

Visual Fields

Standard tangent screen and modified for the low vision patient, as well as static and kinetic perimetry should be performed where indicated. The Goldmann (Topcon) bowl perimeter is recommended for the evaluation of peripheral fields.

Brightness Acuity Test

The Mentor BAT Brightness Acuity Tester can be used to subjectively determine the effect of a glare source. While viewing through the aperture in the BAT and wearing the best subjective distance correction, the patient reads the distance ETDRS chart under low, medium, and high settings. The fellow eye is occluded.

The BAT can also be used as macular photostress test when the aperture is closed.

Additional Tests

Slit-lamp evaluation, direct and indirect ophthalmoscopy, and tonometry should be performed as needed and where indicated. However, additional testing procedures that are not routinely performed during low vision evaluation may be regarded as necessary, especially, for example, if there is a sudden change in vision. The patient should be referred back to the primary eye care practitioner or other specialists for these prodecures. They may include the following: electroretinogram (ERG); visual evoked potential (VEP); electro-oculograrn (EOG); potential acuity meter (PAM); laser interfornetry; ultrasound (A and B scan); fluorescein angiography, and fundus photos. Computed axial tomography (CT) scans, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and analyses of blood chemistries and blood pressure also may be performed.

References:
Feinbloom W. Introduction to the principles and practice of sub-normal vision correction. The Journal of the American Optometric Association 1935; VI: 3-18.
Fonda G. Management of the patient with subnormal vision. St. Louis: CV Mosby, 1965; 110-136.
Faye E. The Low Vision Patient. New York: Grune and Stratton, 1970; 76-113.
Faye E. Clinical Low Vision. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 203-252.
Mehr E, Fried A. Low Vision Care. Chicago: The Professional Press, 1975; 13-24, 81-104.
Newman J. A Guide to the Care of Low Vision Patients. St. Louis: American Optometric Association, 1974; 67-101.
Faye E, Rosenthal B, Hood C, Seidman K. The New York Lighthouse low vision continuing education curriculum. New York: The Lighthouse, 1975.
Rosenthal BP, Cole RG. The Low Vision History. In: Eskridge JB, Amos J, Bartlett I (eds): Clinical Procedures in Optometrv. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Co, 1991; 749-761.
Faye E. Clinical Low Vision, (2nd ed). Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1984; 28.
Bailey IL, Lovie JE. New Design principles for visual acuity letter charts. Am J Optorn Physiol Opt 53: 740-745.
Bailey IL. Visual acuity measurement in low vision, Optom Monthly 1978; 69:418-424.
NAS-NRC Committee on Vision: Recommended standard procedures for the clinical measurements and specification of visual acuity. Adv Ophthalmol 1980; 41:103.
Ferris F, Sperduto R. Standardized illumination for visual acuity testing in clinical research. Am I Ophthalmol 1982; 94:97.
Ferris F, Kassoff A, Bresnick G, Bailey 1. New visual acuity charts for clinical research. Am I Ophthalmol 1982; 94:91-96.
Bruce P. Rosenthal, OD, FAAO, is Chief of Low Vision Programs, Lighthouse International, New York.

Adapted from Problems in Optometry: A Structured Approach to Low Vision Care Volume 3, Number 3, September 1991

 

    Your low vision device is called a spectacle-mounted telescope. Telescopes can be handheld, clip-on, or mounted onto glasses. A telescope will help you see things better at a distance.

Use the telescope with your right or left eye. The other eye may be covered with a patch. The purpose of the patch is to allow you to concentrate on what you are seeing with the telescope. Patching will not harm your eyes. If you have a binocular telescope you will be using both eyes.

DO NOT TRY TO WALK AROUND WHILE LOOKING THROUGH YOUR TELESCOPE. YOU CAN EASILY TRIP AND FALL IF YOU DO SO.

Locate the object you wish to see by raising the glasses or your chin and looking underneath the telescope. Keep looking at the object while you lower your chin or the glasses and look through the telescope to see the object clearly. You may have to turn the focusing ring with your right or left hand until the image is as clear as possible. (If you have a binocular telescope, focus one eye at a time while the other eye is closed.) Move your head and telescope together when scanning to see the entire object or moving target. Always move slowly, because the telescope makes things appear to pass by quickly. If the distance between you and the object changes, you may need to refocus. If there seems to be a problem with lighting or glare, try repositioning yourself.

If you are using your telescope for near tasks, you will need to adjust the focus for this closer distance by making the barrel of your telescope longer. If you have been given a reading cap, first make the barrel of your telescope as short as possible, then place the reading cap on the end of your telescope before beginning to read. To avoid back or neck strain, hold your reading material in a vertical position. A reading stand or clipboard may help you keep the material flat and steady and at the proper focus for your telescope. To keep the image clear, it is crucial that you maintain a consistent distance between yourself and the page. To locate your place in the reading material, place your finger where you wish to start reading, then look through the telescope to find your finger to begin reading. Adjust your light to properly illuminate your reading material.

Practice for approximately 5-10 minutes several times a day in the beginning. Remember that some eye strain, muscle tightness, and possibly even a headache may occur. These symptoms are occurring because you are exercising your eyes in a new way. If these symptoms persist you may want to contact one of our doctors.

Remember learning to use your spectacle-mounted telescope may take some time, practice and patience.

If your frame or telescope goes out of alignment or breaks, do not try to adjust or repair it. Please call your doctor to schedule an appointment for the adjustment or repair of your telescopic system.

Care of your telescope: Clean your telescope with a clean, damp, lint-free cloth. Do not clean your telescope with chemicals or immerse it in water.

If you have any questions, you should call your low vision doctor.

 

The Content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on the LowVision.com Site.

 

 

 
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