Abstract

As life expectancy grows, so too will the number of people adversely affected by age. Although it is acknowledged that many conditions and diseases are associated with age, this mini-review will present a current update of the various visual changes that generally occur in healthy individuals disregarding the possible effects of illness. These alterations influence how the world is perceived and in turn can affect efficiency or the ability to perform ordinary daily tasks such as driving or reading. The most common physical developments include a decreased pupil size and retinal luminance as well as changes both in intercellular and intracellular connections within the retina along the pathway to the visual cortex and within the visual cortex. The quantity and the physical location of retinal cells including photoreceptors, ganglion and bipolar retinal cells are modified. The clarity of intraocular organs, such as the intraocular lens, decreases. These all result in common visual manifestations that include reduced visual acuity, dry eyes, motility changes, a contraction of the visual field, presbyopia, reduced contrast sensitivity, slow dark adaptation, recovery from glare, variation in color vision and a decreased visual processing speed. Highlighting these prevalent issues as well as current and possible future innovations will assist providers to formulate treatments and thereby conserve maximum independence and mobility in the modern mature population.

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations

  • Dynamic visual acuity is the ability to detect objects when they are in motion

  • As far as an explanation regarding those that elude dry eye signs and symptoms, one theory suggests tear physiology; the stability, volume, evaporation, lipid layer structure and osmolality all remain fairly constant over time or decline at a rate that does not compromise the function

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Identifying the age-related impairments, the mechanisms underlying these changes and howand they impact various age-related impairments, the mechanisms underlying these changes how they current activitiesactivities can helpcan caregivers appropriately address and guideand their paimpact everyday current everyday help caregivers appropriately address guide tients to preserve maximum independence and mobility(Figure. Their patients to preserve maximum independence and mobility (Figure 1).

Visual
Dry Eye
Binocular Vision
Ocular Motility
Visual Field
Presbyopia
Contrast Sensitivity
Dark Adaptation
10. Glare Recovery
11. Color Vision
12. Speed of Visual Processing
13. Developing Modes of Intervention and Prevention
14. Summary
Full Text
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