What Happens
Farsightedness (hyperopia) most commonly starts in
early childhood, but normal development and lengthening of the eyeball during
early childhood corrects the condition. If the child is still slightly
farsighted when the eye has finished growing, around 9 years of age, the eye
can usually make up (accommodate) for the remaining
refractive error, allowing the child to see
clearly.
If a child who is farsighted is not able to accommodate for the
refractive error and has problems with vision, eyeglasses or contact lenses may
be necessary. In adults, surgery that either changes the shape of the cornea or
replaces the lens in the eye may be used to restore normal vision.
Farsightedness can often go unnoticed until middle age. Around age
40, the muscles controlling the lens become too weak to compensate for
farsightedness. At the same time, the loss of flexibility in the lens limits
your ability to focus. This stiffening of the lens and change in how well the
muscles work is called
presbyopia. As presbyopia occurs, decreasing the eyes'
ability to compensate for a refractive error, farsightedness becomes apparent.
A farsighted person will begin to have trouble with close work. As presbyopia
increases, near and distance vision will become blurred, until glasses or
contacts are required for both.
Eyeglasses or contact lenses will improve farsightedness but will
not halt the progression of the condition. Symptoms of farsightedness will
still likely get worse as you grow older.
Farsightedness increases the risk for
strabismus, or crossing of the eyes, and
amblyopia, which occurs when one eye is not used
enough and the visual system does not develop properly.