The Future of Glaucoma Care May Be Personal: Matching Treatment to Each Patientโs Risk
Today we are on the brink of truly personalized glaucoma care, where doctors will tailor follow-up plans and treatments to each personโs unique risk...
Deep research and expert guides on maintaining your visual health.
Today we are on the brink of truly personalized glaucoma care, where doctors will tailor follow-up plans and treatments to each personโs unique risk...
Screen your peripheral vision from home โ no downloads, no waiting rooms. Sign up for a free trial and test in under 5 minutes.
Ocular imaging is the use of cameras and scanning tools to take detailed pictures of structures inside the eye. Common tools include optical coherence tomography (OCT), fundus photography, ultrasound, and angiography, each showing different layers or blood flow. These images let doctors see the retina, optic nerve, cornea, and other tissues that are hard or impossible to view directly with the naked eye. Because many eye diseases cause subtle changes long before symptoms appear, imaging can reveal early signs that need attention. Images are also used to measure and track disease over time, so doctors can tell whether a condition is getting better, stable, or worse. This information helps with diagnosis, choosing the right treatment, and deciding how often a person should be seen for follow-up. Ocular imaging is generally noninvasive, fast, and painless, and advances have improved how clear and useful the pictures are. For patients, that means earlier detection, more precise care, and fewer surprises about changes in vision. Overall, these technologies are a central part of modern eye care because they turn hidden problems into clear, actionable information.