
Dr. Lockhart or Dr. Hyde may need to prescribe patching
for your child. This is recommended for the treatment of
amblyopia. Amblyopia is a form of vision loss, usually
occurring in one eye only. The amblyopic eye starts out
in some way compromised. It might be working with a
blurry image because it needs a strong glasses prescription,
or it may be out of alignment with the other eye and cause
your child to see double. Rather than accept the blurry or
double image, the brain tends to suppress or ignore the
worse image and concentrate on the better image from the
other eye. This suppression can worsen to the point that the
bad eye can have permanent visual loss. If amblyopia is
detected at an early age, and the earlier the better, it can be
treated.
First, the compromised eye needs a clear, focused image coming in. Often this can be done with glasses. Then the eye may “turn back on” spontaneously. If vision doesn’t improve with glasses alone, then patching may be necessary. The good eye is patched. This forces the bad eye to pay attention, and vision can improve. Depending on the condition, your child may need glasses or patching, or both. Ultimately, if there is strabismus (misalignment of the eyes), then eye muscle surgery may be necessary.
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The amount of patching needed can vary from child to child. In general:
Younger children
respond to treatment faster than older children.
Amblyopia that has
been present for a long time is harder to treat than amblyopia that recently
developed.
Treatment can be
effective up to 9 years of age in most conditions, longer than that with
a few conditions.
The amount of patching
needed varies from one hour per day to all day long.
The question that often arises is “How in the world am I going to keep a patch on my five-year-old, or two-year-old, or ten-month-old?” For some parents it’s easy. They have that laid back kind of kid that doesn’t care if you patch them all day. But, much more often there is resistance, and some kids protest by immediately dozing off after the patch goes on.
(1) Make sure the patch is as comfortable as possible.
There are two main types of patch:
(2) Design your initial approach to patching according to your
child’s temperament.
Some children will wear the patch the full time on the first day. Others
need to have the length of patching built up gradually. Just don’t
take forever to build up to the recommended time.
(3) In the first days of patching set aside time to introduce patching to
your child.
Find something fun, distracting or stimulating to do. You know better than
anyone else what will keep your child’s mind off the patch. Sometimes
it is best to do close-up work such as:
coloring
working with play-dough
fine motor skills
such as putting beads on a string
reading a book
board & card
games
(4) Use positive reinforcement or rewards.
(5) If resistance to patching persists, consider the tag team
approach.
Ask for help from your spouse or other responsible adults or older children.
(6) Use the weekend to catch up.
If you get behind on the number of hours patched because of a busy weekday
schedule, use the weekend to catch up. Patching hours need not be totally
consecutive, but a regular schedule improves your child’s compliance.
(7) Remember that patching is most difficult at first.
At the time, vision in the amlyopic eye is the worst that it will ever be.
As vision improves, patching often becomes much easier to do.
(8) Don’t stop patching cold turkey unless recommended
by the doctor.
Sometimes tapering off of the patch is necessary to assure that the eye
doesn’t lose vision again. Whenever patching becomes difficult, remember
that months and years from now, it will feel good to know that you’ve
had an active and critical role in the improvement of your child’s
vision.
