866-890-9651

Martin Whitaker, MD
Riverside Eye Center
Ripley Medical Building
193 Main Street
Norway, Maine 04268
207-743-0027

Martin Whitaker, MD
245 Center Street
Auburn, Maine 04210
207-786-2500


About Your Eyes and Cataracts

In order to see clearly, it is necessary for light to be able to pass freely through the Cornea and the Crystalline Lens, which are the two main optical components of your eyes. The Cornea and the Crystalline Lens are responsible for refracting, or bending light so that it can focus properly on the back of the eye, or the Retina. The Cornea is the outermost clear curved “lens” that is visible when looking at your eye from a side view. The Crystalline Lens is located behind the colored part of the eye, or the Iris, and is not directly visible. The Crystalline Lens will be examined during your eye examination by using specialized instruments to look through the Pupil, or the dark center of the Iris. Both the Cornea and the Crystalline Lens need to be perfectly clear in order for you to have good vision. If you are in good health and have not had chronic eye infections, inflammation or had any trauma to your eyes, the Cornea is likely to maintain its clarity throughout your life. The Crystalline Lens however undergoes a number of changes that progress as we age. These aging changes can affect your vision.

Usually by about the time we reach the age of 40 years old, most of us begin to experience some of the visual effects that result from changes in the Crystalline Lens. Even if you have had “good eyes” and “normal vision” all your life, your vision is likely to begin to change in a number of ways. As we progress from our 40’s, to our 50’s and then our 60’s and beyond, the most obvious changes to our vision occur as a result of these changes in the Crystalline Lens.

riverside eye center mainetop

The two most common changes that occur in the Crystalline Lens are:

  • A loss of flexibility, called Presbyopia, which makes it harder to read and
  • A loss of optical clarity, called cataract.

About Presbyopia

Presbyopia begins at around age 40 and progresses until about age 65. Until approximately the age of 40, the crystalline lens is soft and flexible permitting it to change its shape and alter its curvature so that it can help focus your vision at various distances-from far, to near, to arms length, to far or near again. This flexibility gives you the ability to see things at all distances.

Around the time we enter our 40’s, the crystalline lens begins to stiffen making it progressively more difficult to change focus and thus to see clearly at all distances. Often, this reduces our ability to see objects clearly at arms length or up close. When the gradual loss of flexibility of the crystalline lens occurs, it is called Presbyopia or “old eyes”. Presbyopia is a normal and expected consequence of growing older and it affects everyone. Patients beginning Presbyopia will often find their “arms are too short”, and they need to move near objects and reading material farther away in order to bring them into focus and see them clearly.

When Presbyopia begins people who have never worn eyeglasses find that they need reading glasses or bifocals in order to read and see up close. People who already wear glasses may need bifocals or trifocals in order to see comfortably up close. It is important to note that Presbyopia affects everyone including those who have cataracts.

riverside eye center mainetop

If you, a family member or friend are experiencing any of the symptoms of cataracts such as blurred vision, fading of colors, glare, haloes or difficulty with night driving, please feel free to call Riverside Eye Center in Norway, Maine at 207-743-0027or Riverside Eye Center in Auburn, Maine at 207-786-2500 to schedule a Cataract Consultation with Martin Whitaker, M.D.

Riverside Eye Center is conveniently located for Maine eye care patients in need of examination and treatment of Cataracts from Norway, Auburn, Lewiston, Rumford, Brunswick, Bath, Augusta, Farmington, Waterville, Madison and Skowhegan, Maine.

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last modified on 12/15/09