Aging and Your Eyes
Age sometimes brings changes that weaken your eyes, but there are things you can do to maintain lifelong eye and overall health. The solution may be as simple as using brighter lights around the house to help prevent accidents caused by weak eyesight or seeing your doctor more frequently to screen for age-related diseases.

Preventing Eye Problems
While eye problems and eye diseases become more prevalent with age, many can be prevented or corrected if you:
- See your family physician regularly to check for diseases that could cause eye problems, like diabetes.
- Visit your ophthalmologist every one to two years. Having a complete eye exam with an eye specialist is important because most eye diseases can be treated when found in an early stage.
- The eye doctor will dilate or enlarge your pupils by putting drops in your eyes. This is the only way to find some eye diseases that have no early signs or symptoms.
- You should also have a screening for glaucoma.
- The doctor will then test your eyesight, your glasses, and your eye muscles.
Have an eye exam with pupil dilation, at least once every year, if you have diabetes or a family history of eye disease. See an eye doctor immediately if you have any loss of eyesight, blurred vision, eye pain, double vision, redness, swelling of your eye or eyelid, or fluids coming from the eye.
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