
Research into new treatments is ongoing.įor most children with lazy eye, proper treatment improves vision within weeks to months. The effectiveness of adding these activities to other therapies hasn't been proved. If your child's eyes continue to cross or wander apart with the appropriate glasses, your doctor might recommend surgical repair to straighten the eyes, in addition to other lazy eye treatments.Īctivity-based treatments - such as drawing, doing puzzles or playing computer games - are available. Your child might need surgery if he or she has droopy eyelids or cataracts that cause deprivation amblyopia.

Side effects include sensitivity to light and eye irritation. Usually prescribed for use on weekends or daily, use of the drops encourages your child to use the weaker eye, and offers an alternative to a patch. An eyedrop of a medication called atropine (Isopto Atropine) can temporarily blur vision in the stronger eye. The filter blurs the stronger eye and, like an eye patch, works to stimulate the weaker eye. This special filter is placed on the eyeglass lens of the stronger eye.

#How to fix a lazy eye Patch#
In rare cases, wearing an eye patch too long can cause amblyopia to develop in the patched eye. To stimulate the weaker eye, your child wears an eye patch over the eye with better vision for two to six or more hours a day. Glasses or contact lenses can correct problems such as nearsightedness, farsightedness or astigmatism that result in lazy eye. Treatment options depend on the cause of lazy eye and on how much the condition is affecting your child's vision.

The best results occur when treatment starts before age 7, although half of children between the ages of 7 and 17 respond to treatment. It's important to start treatment for lazy eye as soon as possible in childhood, when the complicated connections between the eye and the brain are forming.
