Evyn was
an excellent student who considered school easy before suffering
a concussion at
the age of 13 while playing soccer. After the injury, Evyn struggled to achieve
the same level of success, finding it difficult to take notes from the board, needing
to read and re-read material, and taking extra time to complete her homework
and tests. Turns out, Evyn’s concussion caused something called “convergence
insufficiency,” an eye coordination disorder that leads to double vision and
other visual disturbances that make reading difficult. Evynsuffered with near-constant
spots in her vision, headaches, and her eyes didn’t work well together.These
side effects aren’t surprising to eye experts, who know that vision therapy is
essential to complete concussion recovery.
“Research
has shown that approximately 70 percent of young athletes who suffer a
concussion have eye coordination, focusing, and eye movement problems,” says
Dr. Kara Heying, OD, FCOVD, president of the College of Optometrists in Vision Development. “Yet most parents are left on
their own to choose a health care professional who can help their child correct
these problems.” And, in many cases, parents aren’t going to immediately take
their child to visit an optometrist for a head injury. They are more likely
toseeneurologists, physical therapists, pediatricians, and sports medicine
specialists, but it’s a developmental optometrist who is one of the most
critical members of a teen’s concussion recovery team.
Understanding the Importance of
Vision Therapy
Concussions
and TBIs can cause unique forms of vision problems, including eye coordination
issues and eye movement disorders.When a teen develops a
concussion, whether through a sports injury, car accident, fall, or otherwise,
treatment should include vision therapy.
Part
of the prescription for managing a concussion in general is to rest your eyes
in a dark room and to avoid taxing activities like reading a book, watching
television, or using a computer or smartphone. But you’re not expected to sleep
away your recovery – even though it might seem like that’s all there is left to
do. Vision rehabilitation can be active, not passive.
“The
traditional vision approach still relies on the spontaneous recovery of double
vision, patching, and using therapies to learn functional approaches around
vision deficits, as opposed to treating the vision deficits,” says Heying.“However,
many optometrists across our nation are providing optometric vision therapy in
addition to therapeutic lenses and prisms to help resolve visual deficits.”
What Vision Therapy Includes
The goal
of vision therapy, especially for more severe head injuries, can aid a person
in self-correcting their double vision problems, find their balance, and
strengthen their equilibrium. Under the care and supervision of an optometrist
who is experienced in treating concussion-related vision problems and has the
specialized tools and medical equipment to monitor progress, the patient will
undergo a progressive program of vision procedures that are customized to fit
their visual needs. The sessions are typically conducted in the eye doctor’s
office once or twice a week and last for 30 to 60 minutes. Supplemental
exercises may be prescribed so treatment can continue at home in between office
visits.
Optometric
vision therapy isn’t about strengthening eye muscles, which are already very
strong. This specific therapy is intended to retrain the learned aspects of
vision through neuroplasticity, which is the potential that a person’s brain
has to create neural pathways to adapt to a person’s needs, especially after
the trauma of a head injury.
About:
David Christensen is a personal injury attorney who represents clients that
have suffered traumatic brain injuries. Christensen Law has offices in Ann Arbor,
Michigan and Southfield, Michigan.





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