Just as people have myopia and hypermetropia, Aberropia is another refractive error. |
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If you have myopia, your eye is generally slightly out of round, with light rays focusing in front of the retina instead of directly on it. |
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When changes due to myopia are present as diagnosed by the eye doctor, the retina is thin and can develop tears, holes and detachment. |
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Whether myopia, hyperopia or astigmatism is present, surgical correction attempts to redirect light rays to accommodate the refractive error. |
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One of the authors treated an otherwise healthy 30-year old female with poor acuity, impaired night vision, and myopia. |
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He is already burying the actor and his career in a classically Friedmanesque act of media myopia. |
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In this study, three groups of people with different degrees of myopia were assessed for optic disc ovalness, refractive error and axial length. |
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There were signs on Thursday that Shell's maddening myopia when it comes to the bleeding obvious is still not completely cured. |
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A year later a ground glass contact lens was made to treat an ophthalmologist's own high myopia. |
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Certainly the myopia of focusing on oneself and one's own happiness, fulfillment, or satisfaction alone is detrimental to any relationship. |
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Refractive error is measured in dioptres, and myopia is designated with a minus sign. |
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In myopia, the growth process continues after correction of the initial hyperopia. |
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Much of Mr. Moore's Manichaeism will be yawningly familiar to anyone accustomed to the weird myopia of the far left these days. |
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Contact lenses can be used most advantageously to correct myopia, but can also be used for hypermetropia and corneal astigmatism. |
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I have suffered from myopia or shortsightedness all my life and things are getting worse. |
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Protective eyewear is recommended for persons participating in contact sports, especially if they have moderate or severe myopia. |
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How about Alfred Wegener and continental drift, probably the canonical story of establishment myopia? |
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Refractive error not associated with amblyopia principally includes myopia and hyperopia. |
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The measurement begins at zero, and as the negative number increases below zero, so does the severity of myopia. |
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It reeks of the typical psychology and myopia of the supposed intellectually and militarily powerful. |
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The difference between political and religious leadership has blurred due to which the nation as a whole is affected gravely by myopia. |
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The Romans considered myopia a permanent defect that reduced the market value of a slave. |
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The glasses you wear for refractory errors like myopia, hyperopia and presbyopia should not be out of date. |
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Further elucidation of the biochemical processes in these animal models of myopia may have implications for treating myopia in humans. |
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Photo-refractive keratectomy involves treating the surface of the cornea with an Excimer laser which results in flattening of the cornea to correct myopia. |
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With myopia, the cornea is too curved or the eyeball too long. |
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Surgery can correct myopia by altering the shape of the cornea. |
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By so doing, these programs both protect the profligate against the effects of their myopia and insure that everyone contributes to helping such persons. |
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The main role of a lens is to correct the vision of people with myopia, astigmatism, hyperopia and presbyopia. |
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It is anticipated that these devices will become more common in correcting myopia and hyperopia in the upcoming years. |
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Astigmatism can combine with other visual disorders like myopia, hypermetropia or presbyopia. |
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He admires Pompadour's magisterial self-invention, but deplores her grandiosity, womanish myopia, and bulimic shopping. |
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If we critics got it wrong, it wasn't just because of our collective myopia. |
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Choosing to make a priority of hosting the World Cup rather than creating a pool of talent that could win it was another act of profound myopia. |
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We are not used to investing in peacebuilding, because we have suffered from the myopia I have just mentioned. |
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Yet this coalition is also an example of institutional myopia, an inability to detect and respond to potential threats. |
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Francisco lived 40 of his 45 years in religion outside the cloister... This did not provoke in him a mental blindness or myopia. |
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For this reason, the shrine becomes a constant call to critique the myopia of all human projects that would impose themselves as absolutes. |
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It would be a sort of political myopia don't realize what is in the interest of the whole european Union, in its present and future shape. |
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A common symptom of marketing myopia is the inability to see beyond the narrowest conception of a company's business. |
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Progressive myopia with degenerative changes is considered to be a disabling condition. |
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It is also the case, for many car drivers, and particularly those affected by myopia, who have to cope with a flood of white light when it rains. |
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For example, a short-sighted person might meet one test for disability, whilst with corrective lenses few would regard his myopia as a disability. |
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And on some crucial questions Allen suffers from analytic myopia. |
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Afrocentrism, with its all-too-common androcentric bias, still has far to go to overcome its seemingly inherent myopia regarding the thought of black women. |
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Apart from testing the eye, they supply booklets detailing eye care with particular reference to refractive errors such as myopia, hypermetropia and astigmatism. |
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The world leader in ophthalmic optical products, Essilor International researches, develops, manufactures and markets around the world a wide range of lenses to correct myopia, hyperopia, presbyopia and astigmatism. |
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Artistically, however, it pales beside the sly wit and beauty of Hu Wei's The Butter Lamp, in which a photographer's portraiture of Tibetan villagers gives way to a larger statement on cultural myopia. |
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The eximer laser is then used to ablate or reshape the interior of the cornea to correct myopia, astigmatism, or farsightedness. |
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So it's rather easy for an American in this case to kvetch about the pointless myopia of insisting on fairness. Mr Surowiecki does bolster his argument with an American example: mortgage relief to underwater homeowners. |
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An easy-to-fit high water content spherical soft lens manufactured using cast molding technology, and designed for use in the correction of myopia or hyperopia on a daily wear or extended wear basis. |
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Hypermetropia is the most common finding in these individuals, however if myopia is present, it can be to a significantly high degree. |
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Eyeglasses, also called glasses or spectacles, lenses set in frames for wearing in front of the eyes to aid vision or to correct such defects of vision as myopia, hyperopia, and astigmatism. |
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We have an exciting product that helps children worldwide by preventing their myopia from progressing during their teenage years. |
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A series of authors has focused upon the increasing myopia in the youngest generations of Inuit. |
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In radial keratotomy for myopia, for example, a doctor slices the cornea around the pupil in pizza-cutter fashion to flatten the cornea. |
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GlobalData's latest clinical trial report, Myopia Global Clinical Trials Review, H2, 2011 provides data on the myopia clinical trial scenario. |
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Through a broad range of lenses, we provide solutions for correcting myopia, hypermetropia, astigmatism and presbyopia to enable people to regain perfect vision. |
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Sometime in late the 1980s, he learned of radial keratotomy, the surgical procedure designed to correct myopia. |
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Ophthalmologic examination revealed blue-like scleras, myopia astigmatism, and bilateral partial retinitis pigmentosa. |
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Clinical signs of WMS include glaucoma, ectopia lentis, lenticular myopia, spherophakia, and short stature. |
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Studies of people in Alaska and Greenland show that myopia is more common in younger generations than older. |
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The model also explains the skewness towards myopia of the distribution of refractive errors. |
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Technically known as myopia, nearsightedness occurs when the eye is unusually long, a shape that causes light rays to focus too far in front of the retina. |
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You are likely to be a good candidate if you are affected by short sight, known as myopia, or long sight, which is hyperopia. |
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The computer calculates to which depth the Excimer Laser has to work in order to correct certain degrees of myopia, hypermetropia and astigmatism. |
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The study raises the hope that an eye exam soon after birth will enable ophthalmologists to prevent myopia and other visual problems. |
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But many assets are not traded at all, and even for those that are it is unlikely that current prices fully reflect this future-oriented dimension, due to market imperfections, myopia and uncertainty. |
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In Japan, pathologic myopia and the associated myopic CNV is the second most common cause of blindness. |
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Although using this 'diversity lens' may assist people in your organization to identify barriers, we all have our own myopia based on our own cultural backgrounds. |
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For myopia, hypermetropia and astigmatism, results are long-term. |
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On the other side, the ethos of evaluation is itself prone to a myopia that can make it difficult for evaluators to play co-operatively with social innovators. |
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With its flagship brands Varilux®, Crizal®, Essilor® and Definity®, the world leader in ophtalmic optics ESSILOR International provides a wide range of lenses to correct myopia, hypermetropia, presbyopia and astigmatism. |
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Once completed, the research team will be in a better position to assess whether such institutional myopia is widespread and can identify where gains in human development also enhance the quality of the local environment. |
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Rather, they suggest that parental nearsightedness, or myopia, may actually play a stronger role in predicting a child's myopia than use of night lights does. |
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According to a company press release, it can measure for myopia, hyperopia, astigmatism, pupil size, pupil distance and anisocoria, in addition to refraction. |
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There are a number of systemic conditions in which myopia is a feature. |
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First, we discuss Krog's version of hospitality as an implicit response to the dynamics of moral myopia captured so vividly in Schoeman's dystopian portrait of Afrikanerdom. |
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