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Statistic:
A new case of adult Macular Degeneration is diagnosed
every three minutes in the United States of America
Your retina contains an extraordinary photo-sensitive array
of cells that line the back of your eye. The light falling onto
these cells in the retina is transformed into electrical signals
which are transmitted to those brain centers that create the
complex and wonderful experience of vision.
The most concentrated collection of photo-sensitive cells
in your retina, including those that enable critical color and
fine detail vision, are found in the "Bulls-Eye" center
zone in an area called the macula.
Macular degeneration is the imprecise historical name given
to a very poorly understood group of diseases that cause sight-sensing
cells in the macular zone of the retina to malfunction or lose
function. The result is debilitating loss of vital central or
detail vision.
The brain cleverly learns to compensate and fill in the missing
part of the picture in early cases with spotty macular cell damage
or dysfunction so that most people only present to their ophthalmologist
when disease is fairly advanced.
Compared to the huge numbers of people affected (over 13 million),
research efforts towards discovery of cause and cure by government,
public and private institutions are inappropriately small.
The Macular Degeneration Foundation is at the forefront of
efforts to educate the public, patients, professionals and deliver
science-based solutions.
Call Vision Care Center of Northeast
Arkansas
for more information 870-802-3937
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