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Volume: 63 | Article ID: jist0677
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Color Vision Differences Following Retinal Detachment and Subsequent Cataract Surgery
  DOI :  10.2352/J.ImagingSci.Technol.2019.63.4.040405  Published OnlineJuly 2019
Abstract
Abstract

In September 2017, the first author suffered a rhegmatogenous retinal detachment. This experience included a series of remarkable, sometimes unsettling visual phenomena, which included visible differences in the color vision between her two eyes during the recovery from retinal detachment, as a cataract developed, and following cataract surgery. Her right eye is now equipped with a new lens, replacing one that had yellowed from years of exposure to ultraviolet radiation, which provides a cooler view of the world than before retinal detachment, with slight distortions, and occasionally with sparkles early in the morning. In this review, the color vision changes that were experienced are quantified and detailed. While this does not represent a typical study with a hypothesis and testing of various participants, we hope that it inspires others to ask interesting questions that lead to increased consideration of the relationships between perception and visual health and that it raises awareness of the warning signs of retinal detachment.

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  Cite this article 

Susan Farnand, Rajeev Ramchandran, Mark Fairchild, "Color Vision Differences Following Retinal Detachment and Subsequent Cataract Surgeryin Journal of Imaging Science and Technology,  2019,  pp 040405-1 - 040405-8,  https://doi.org/10.2352/J.ImagingSci.Technol.2019.63.4.040405

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  Copyright statement 
Copyright © Society for Imaging Science and Technology 2019
  Article timeline 
  • received March 2019
  • accepted May 2019
  • PublishedJuly 2019

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