My Story Part 1: Born With Strabismus, Patching, Glasses and 3 Surgeries
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Feb 22, 2023
Learn about what treatment for my congenital esotropia looked like from birth to 12 years old. To learn more go to https://strabismussolutions.com/ Part 1: https://youtu.be/rVop0sud644 Part 2:https://youtu.be/LRn-Kb6RDlQ Part 3: https://youtu.be/Z6RAjVPYQRw Part 4: https://youtu.be/QVCP_pVTgNU
View Video Transcript
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hi my name is Melissa Daniels and I have strabismus and if you've been following
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this channel for a while you will know that I have been working so hard on getting my brain
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to use both of my eyes together and it's been a long process involving vision therapy and surgery
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but one question that I get all the time is how did it start so this video is all about those first
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few years of my life being diagnosed with strabismus congenital esotropia and what my
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parents did to help correct that and how it worked now if you want to know more details about this
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you can always go to my website strabismus solutions comm and I have a timeline there
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that basically takes you through everything from the time I was born up until now but this is the
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video version of that so when I was born my parents didn't notice anything at
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first but by the time I was about four months old a friend of my mom's mentioned
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to her like did you notice that your daughter's eyes are turning in and my mom hadn't really thought anything of it she just thought it was cute that my
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eyes were crossed but the friend kind of helped her understand like no this is a
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serious medical problem and you should take her to an ophthalmologist they they
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did their research they asked around and everyone said this is who you go to this is who you go to
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and they went in measured my eyes I had 45 to 50 diopters of esotropia and was diagnosed with
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congenital esotropia which is basically when you were born with your eyes crossed and they were
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crossed very severely and so as most ophthalmologists do we started with glasses and
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patching so we would they would patch one eye for a full day the whole time I was awake and then
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and they would switch and patch the other day, the next, sorry, the other eye the next day
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And it was very obvious it was not working. My eye turn was actually getting more severe By the time they decided to do surgery at six months it was at like 55 to 60 diopters So it had gotten even worse once we tried the patching and the glasses
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And so they decided to go ahead and do surgery, did surgery on both of my eyes
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and got it quite a bit better. But according to the notes
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I still had 20 diopters of esotropia. So they gave me glasses with prism
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to try to help me align my eyes. And so it was really important that I wore those glasses, trying to get my brain to engage
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both eyes that time, like that six months to 12 months, that's like a huge time for developing
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stereo vision. So looking at the notes, it's obvious to me that that's what the doctor was hoping to
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be able to achieve. And unfortunately, yeah, I was coming in like every month or even like every couple of weeks
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and it just, it wasn't, it wasn't helping at all. I wouldn't wear the glasses
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once the doctor told her how important it was for me to be wearing the glasses my mom
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actually went and got a straight jacket and put it on me I was a nine month old little baby
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put me in a straight jacket so that I couldn't bend my arms to take off my glasses and it was
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really hard for her she said for about a month she just held me all day because I would cry
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I wanted to pull my glasses off, but she knew how important it was for me to develop good vision
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And even though it didn't work, I'm still so grateful that she tried, right
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That was the, everything she knew. And maybe, maybe it did work on some level with my peripheral or something, maybe something did work
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But according to all the notes from my doctor's visits throughout the years, I never had any sort of stereo vision
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I never used my eyes together. so by between the ages of two and seven I did patching lots and lots of patching I
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got old enough to where they could actually do a more I don't know in-depth
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exam because I could actually respond and realize that I definitely had
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amblyopia in my right eye and so instead of switching alternating from one eye to the other for patching we just only patched the left eye most of the day I was wearing a patch and then always
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glasses as well and the amblyopia and the vision in my eye was like 120 in my right eye and like
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30 20 in my left eye and so after patching and all of that we got it to 2030 in 2020 and so I
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never had to patch again after about age seven, which was fantastic. I love not having to patch
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I was lucky enough. I never really got teased in school. I went to a really small school
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and I was with the same group of kids from kindergarten up until fourth grade. And so
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this whole time that I was patching and wearing glasses and all of this, I was with the same group
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of kids. So they were used to it. They knew from kindergarten. I was the girl who wore patches and
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glasses and never got teased. And I don't think anyone noticed my eye turn because it was covered
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with a patch. The notes are unclear. Like I was saying before about the exotropia, esotropia
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right? Like they're saying my eye was 20 diopters in and then all of a sudden it switches to
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exotropia and it was just slight. And then it slowly got worse and worse. And by the time I was
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seven, it was about 20 diopters of exotropia and they decided to do a third surgery. The results
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were great. My eyes were really close to perfect alignment. You know, the notes say zero to five
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diopters of exotropia. So I was pretty, pretty minimal. And I only came in and then I think they
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said, don't come in for another couple of years. And so we continued, I didn't have to patch
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but I continued wearing glasses with prism and, and going through life. And when I came
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when I was nine years old, they basically said, you've gotten as far as you can get
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And you're stable. Your, your vision is very stable. You don't need to worry about wearing
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glasses anymore. I never wore glasses again. And there's, there's only one more note. When I was
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12 years old was the last time I went to the ophthalmologist. And so I went in because I felt
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like the vision in my right eye was really blurry And it funny because in the notes it was still 20 30 in my right eye and 20 20 in my left But I think I just became more aware by the time I was
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12. And I was like, you know, I would do this kind of thing and I'd be like, something's wrong with
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this eye. It's not as good. Like I just didn't realize. And there's also a note that I was
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it was turning occasionally, like it was intermittently turning out, but I didn't even
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notice that. I just noticed the blurriness was bothering me. So went in when I was 12 and they
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didn't really say much. Um, they basically, I can't even remember how it ended, but I just never
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went back. We moved, we moved far away. We moved to California and that was the last time I went to
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an ophthalmologist until I was 32 years old. And so they definitely like all that work they did
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when I was little, it got my eyes to a place where they were stable, where my eyes weren't turning
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too much they still would intermittently but for the most part they stayed within the range that
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it wasn't noticeable to the naked eye you know within 15 to 20 diopters of exotropia so they're
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just a little bit out every now and then we'd get a school picture that it looked really bad but for
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the most part just when I was tired my eye would wander more and so I think they decided to stop
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my parents, the doctors, because it was like they did so much for so many years and got me to where
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they thought was the best I could get. In the next video, I'm going to talk a little bit more about
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how this affected me in school, during high school, college, and the things that I noticed
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while I was in school that made it challenging and what the I-turn meant for me in those years
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and then in future videos we'll kind of talk about how I discovered vision therapy and why
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I decided to go that route. So subscribe and you'll get notifications when that next one
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posts but I post every Friday so keep looking for these videos if you want to hear the rest
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of the story. We'll see you in the next one
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