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Originally Posted by 3 Justin 3
Hesla is a professional.
Also, what is this strabismus surgery you speak of Hesla? I have a lazy eye as well (prescription isn't even that high on it, around 2.5 though I doubt that has anything to do with the muscle being weak) and would love to get it fixed. I've never heard there was a surgery for it. My lazy eye isn't one of those weird looking ones though. Looks normal, vision is just blurry so I doubt this strabismus surgery is even meant for my problem. Just curious if you could go into more detail.
I've had a consultation with the folks at Gimble years ago (when I was 18) and they recommend I come back after I age more, so when I hit 25 (three years from now) I plan on going back to get my other eye fixed (which isn't even that bad).
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Strabismus surgery is for an eye-turn. A lazy eye can be a muscle problem that leads to an eye turning inward or outward. It can also be a prescription thing where one high has vastly different prescription that the other eye during development, so basically the eye is shut off.