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Re:o/t floaters are not parasites
 
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Published: 13 y
 
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Re:o/t floaters are not parasites


I've seen this over and over on CZ.

Eye floaters are not parasites, so trying to blast them out with Miracle-Mineral-Supplement is not going to do a danged thing. Follow the link if you want to learn TCM's view on floaters and how that can be addressed with Chinese medicine.

http://www.itmonline.org/arts/floaters.htm


It is not until middle age, around age 40, that there are significant changes in the vitreous that generate floaters. The vitreous begins to slowly dry out, and the collagen becomes more clumped, leaving the vitreous almost entirely a free flowing fluid with some intervening gel lumps. These produce the floaters that are most frequently reported. They tend to "float" more easily because of the breakdown of the gel matrix. Nothing needs to enter the vitreous to make these floaters and nothing is present to break down the floaters, so they remain for many months. They may eventually degrade or settle out, or they may persist.

With further aging, the vitreous will dry, thicken, and shrink to an extent that it starts to pull away from the retina (the condition is called posterior vitreous detachment). This process may be the result of a sudden drying of the fluid, rather than the gradual drying that is normally expected. When a sudden vitreous shrinkage occurs, there can be a substantial appearance of floaters over a short period.

While vitreous detachment through a gradual process is common by age 70, it occurs more often and sometimes earlier in people who are nearsighted, have undergone cataract surgery or laser eye surgery, or who have an inflammatory disease of the inner portion of the eye, such as retinitis. When the vitreous gel pulls away from the retina, nothing may happen (vision remains basically the same), but this pulling can cause some retinal tears. Tearing of the retina may allow some blood cells to flow into the vitreous cavity, which accounts for some of the new floaters; other floaters may appear as a result of contraction of the fibers that had been attaching the vitreous to the retina.

When a retinal tear occurs, some of the vitreous fluid can penetrate into the torn areas and lift away the rest of the retina, which is extremely thin, leading to partial or full detachment. During retinal tearing or detachment, flashes of light (like flurries of fireflies) are detected by the patient, and the vision may be blurred, particularly in certain portions of the visual field. The torn retina should be examined carefully, as it may require treatment, such as laser photocoagulation, cryopexy (freezing), or surgery, to avoid complete retinal detachment or to treat a detached retina.

The condition of the vitreous fluid and the nature of floaters are observed by dilating the eye (applying eye drops to do so), and then examining the region through the pupil. There are no medical treatments for floaters. Some floaters, particularly those that occur as a young adult, will eventually disappear as the gel matrix changes. Other floaters, particularly those that occur in later years, may disappear as they settle out of the fluid. In persons suffering from severe disorders of the vitreous, which occurs in some cases of diabetes or where injuries have allowed blood into the vitreous, a vitrectomy may be performed; the vitreous is removed and placed with an artificial substitute liquid called hyaluronate.

 

 
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