Optisan Clinic specialists have succeeded in changing the lives of young people who dreamed of becoming soldiers, policemen, firemen or gendarmes and were declared unfit at the medical examination because of amblyopia (lazy eye). So what if you have amblyopia (lazy eye) and have been declared UNSuitable for a military career? Optisan Clinic helps you to follow your dream! A desire to evolve, a love for the medical profession, hard work, perseverance, empathy towards each patient who crosses the clinic’s threshold, professionalism. This is how the founder of the Optisan Ophthalmology Centre – Dr. Alexandru Dimitriu, a primary ophthalmologist, who in recent years has achieved remarkable results in the therapy of amblyopia (lazy eye). See full article
Have you ever imagined not seeing? If not, give it a try. Experiment with walking around the house, for example, with your eyes covered. It won’t be easy to manage. Remember what it feels like to see a blind person with a white cane on the street. Try to imagine what it would be like to be blind or partially sighted and go shopping or take trips. These are just some of the scenarios that a patient with amblyopia (lazy eye) should imagine. Yes, these patients have excellent vision in one eye and this helps them cope with everyday life. However, an accident to the good eye or a disease of that eye would leave them unable to cope. Don’t go on the “it can’t happen to me” idea! See full article
Dr Alexandru Dimitriu, an ophthalmologist at a clinic in Sălaj county, has been searching for many years for solutions to amblyopia, also known as lazy eye disease, characterised by poor performance of one eye. As a result of his research, he discovered a series of exercise software in the form of video games in the USA, with which he developed a unique method of visual therapy. From 2010 to date, dozens of patients have recovered their sight at his clinic through computerised pleoptic and orthoptic exercises. See full article
Patients with amblyopia (lazy eye) and strabismus find at the Optisan Clinic in Zalau a unique and efficient method of treatment. After 10 years of study and work, Dr. Alexandru Dimitriu managed to make visual therapy visible in Romania and Europe. I heard about the Optisan Clinic from a friend. He is from Bucharest and one day I heard him going to Zalau to the Optisan Clinic with his child, because only there there there is a treatment method for the recovery of lazy eye vision. See full article
In recent years, hundreds of patients from Romania and Europe have come to the Optisan Clinic in Zalau for the treatment of amblyopia (lazy eye) through a method of visual therapy developed by Dr. Alexandru Dimitriu, primary ophthalmologist. Amblyopia (lazy eye) is frequently diagnosed in Romania and in the world but most ophthalmologists treat it until the age of 7-8 years, considering that after this age the condition is incurable. See full article
Much has been written about the Optisan Clinic this past year. It has been a fantastic year for the specialists of the ophthalmology clinic in Zalău who have managed to bring visual therapy to the level of art and make it known to patients in Romania and Europe. For this they have studied a lot, with US professors, worked hard, treated hundreds of patients with amblyopia, strabismus, learning disabilities and visual impairment after minor head trauma or stroke. See full article
A desire to evolve, a love for the medical profession, hard work, perseverance, empathy towards each patient who crosses the clinic’s threshold, professionalism. This is how the founder of the Optisan Ophthalmology Centre – Dr. Alexandru Dimitriu, a primary ophthalmologist, who in recent years has achieved remarkable results in the therapy of amblyopia (lazy eye). Although he doesn’t like to talk too much about himself, he speaks with enthusiasm about his work, his team and his project related to visual therapy (a little-known field in Romania, but used in the US for various conditions). He speaks warmly about his patients and with joy that he is able to help them, and some even change their lives. See full article
That I keep going to the dentist, but I wouldn’t have thought it was so important to get your child to the eye doctor for routine checkups. When he’s young, i.e. from the age of 3. What’s all this exaggeration, you might say. Weekly ultrasounds when she’s in her tummy, to the dentist before she walks upright, now to the eye doctor you send us too? Well, let’s see. You know I’ve only had 3 ultrasounds in 10 months of pregnancy, that I’m not the “pro-vitamins-for-food cravings” type or weaning the kids off for the sake of the exercise of getting some tests done because it’s been another year and they’re free, though he shows no signs of concern. But this eye doctor thing is serious. See full article
About three out of every hundred children suffer from amblyopia, a condition popularly known as lazy eye. If you are the parents of the other 97, this article will surely be boring for you. But if you are the parent of a young child (who might develop this condition, it occurs over time, around the age of 5) or a child who already suffers from lazy eye, I hope this article brings you good news and convinces you to take your child for regular eye check-ups, so you can detect the onset of this condition and treat it quickly and permanently. I’m writing about this topic also because I think it’s great that innovative things are being done in our field of medicine, that have results and that deserve to be promoted! See full article
Optisan Clinic specialists have succeeded in changing the lives of young people who dreamed of becoming soldiers, policemen, firemen or gendarmes and were declared unfit at the medical examination because of amblyopia (lazy eye). So what if you have amblyopia (lazy eye) and have been declared UNSuitable for a military career? Optisan Clinic helps you to follow your dream! A desire to evolve, a love for the medical profession, hard work, perseverance, empathy towards each patient who crosses the clinic’s threshold, professionalism. This is how the founder of the Optisan Ophthalmology Centre – Dr. Alexandru Dimitriu, a primary ophthalmologist, who in recent years has achieved remarkable results in the therapy of amblyopia (lazy eye). See full article
A few years ago in America, two little boys were playing on a frozen lake. At some point, who knows how, one of them fell into the very cold water. The other little boy went to his friend’s side, took off his shoe and kept breaking the ice around his fallen friend to help him survive until rescue crews arrived. After rescuing the child, the men took the child’s shoe and tried to repeat what the boy had done. But no matter how hard they tried, they couldn’t break through the ice, which was pretty thick. They called in all sorts of specialists to give their opinion on what seemed to be a supernatural power of that child. No one could give any explanation except a psychologist who told them the following: See full article
Time passes at an astonishing speed and our children grow up too fast. Sometimes we want them big and independent, sometimes we want to hold time back and still enjoy their innocence. As they grow, so do our worries, and their dreams. Some want to become firefighters, others want to fly high in the sky, some see themselves as doctors, and a few want to become competitive athletes. What do we parents do with their dreams? I would say nurture them, encourage them and give children all the resources they need to make them a reality. The main thing we should do is take care of our children’s health, because some conditions can prevent them from achieving their dreams. See full article
Laptops, tablets or smartphones – these are just some of the devices we use every day at work, at lunch, in the car or on the street. Used in excess, they can affect our eyesight. Although it seems paradoxical, an ophthalmologist from Sălaj shows us that, if used correctly, modern technology can help us recover our vision…See full article
An ophthalmologist from Sălaj treats amblyopia with video games. Laptops, tablets and smartphones are just some of the devices we use every day at work or at leisure. But used in excess, they can affect our eyesight. However, an ophthalmologist from Sălaj shows that, if used correctly, modern technology can help us recover our vision.. . See full article
Laptops, tablets, smartphones – these are just some of the devices we use, day in, day out, at work and in our free time. Used in excess, they can affect our eyesight. However, an ophthalmologist from Sălaj shows us that, if used correctly, modern technology can help us recover our vision… See full article
Between 2% and 5% of the world’s population has been diagnosed with amblyopia, a condition that is particularly prevalent among children. Amblyopia is a silent condition that does not transmit easily noticeable symptoms like other diseases. The child with amblyopia doesn’t realise that they can’t see well with one eye. Thus, the brain ignores images from the problem eye and only perceives images from the healthy eye. Amblyopia can be fully recovered if detected and diagnosed early. Most of the time, children don’t realise the problems they have, can’t tell their parents about them, and so don’t get an eye examination. See full article
The method designed for the recovery of lazy eye vision allows the creation of a personalised treatment plan by adapting the technical parameters for each individual patient. Specialists can monitor patients’ performance in real time and readjust the treatment plan according to the results. After the personalised settings have been made, the patient starts the exercise session for sight recovery. Each session can last between 20 and 30 minutes, and the difficulty of the exercises increases as the patient’s vision improves.
Dr. Alexandru Dimitriu says that “recovery is achieved in two stages: pleoptic therapy for the recovery of lazy eye vision, then orthoptic therapy to educate binocular vision”.
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The most widely used method of treatment for amblyopia is to close the healthy eye in order to boost the visual acuity of the amblyopic eye. In the experience of many ophthalmologists, it has been observed that this method is unpleasant, uncomfortable and creates a high level of discomfort for the patient, and its effectiveness is not always as desired. At the same time, specialists believe that visual recovery with this method can only take place up to the age of 6-7 years. The main thing we should do is take care of our children’s health, because some conditions can prevent them from achieving their dreams. See full article
Eye problems can occur at any age, say experts, who recommend that parents take their child for an eye check-up, even if there is no clear suspicion.
Signs of a possible visual defect in children can appear as early as the first weeks of life, even if their visual sense is poorly developed at the time. Besides, after birth.. . See full article
Amblyopia, popularly known as “lazy eye”, is a condition due to untreated problems that have caused the eye, and indeed the brain, to be unable to receive and process images.
It is manifested by decreased vision in an anatomically normally developed eye and can occur from the earliest days of life, due to certain factors. Among these, specialists say, refractive errors (myopia, hyphema and astigmatism), ...See full article