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Liana Al-Labadi, O.D.
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Optometric terms Astigmatism : A condition in which the cornea's curvature is asymmetrical (the eye is shaped like a football or egg instead of a baseball); light rays are focused at two points on the retina rather than one, resulting in blurred vision. Additional symptoms include distorted vision, eyestrain, shadows on letters, squinting and double vision Anisometropia : A condition where the eyes have a significantly different refractive power from each other, so the prescription required for good vision will be different for each eye. Amblyopia - Also called lazy eye. Undeveloped central vision in one eye that leads to the use of the other eye as the dominant eye. Strabismus is the leading cause, followed by anisometropia. There are no symptoms. The patient may be found squinting and closing one eye to see; there may be unrecognized blurred vision in one eye and vision loss. http://www.opted.org/files/public/Eyes_Have_it_Career_Guide_-_FINAL_02_10.pdf
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Optometric terms Refraction: The test performed during an eye exam to determine the eyeglass lens powers needed for optimum visual acuity. An automated refraction uses an instrument that does not require the patient to respond. A manifest refraction is the manual way to determine the best lenses, by placing various lenses in front of the patient's eyes and asking, "Which is better, lens 1 or lens 2?“ Strabismus : A misalignment of the eyes The eyes don't point at the same object together. Crossed eyes (esotropia) are one type of strabismus; "wall-eyes" (exotropia) are another. The exact cause is unknown, but appears to be a problem with the eye muscles. Strabismus can affect depth perception. http://www.opted.org/files/public/Eyes_Have_it_Career_Guide_-_FINAL_02_10.pdf
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Optometric terms Prescription lenses : Lenses that provide vision correction as prescribed by an eye care practitioner. Best corrected visual acuity (BCVA): The best vision you can achieve with correction (such as glasses), as measured on the standard Snellen eye chart. For example, if your uncorrected eyesight is 6/60, but you can see 6/6 with glasses, your BCVA is 6/6
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Optometric terms Diopter: Unit of measure for the refractive (light-bending) power of a lens eye care practitioners use it in eyeglass and contact lens prescriptions A negative number refers to nearsightedness; a positive number, farsightedness. For example, someone with -8.00 diopter lenses is very nearsighted, while someone with +0.75 diopter lenses is only slightly farsighted. Phakic: An eye that still has its natural lens. When an eye is aphakic, usually the lens has been removed during cataract or other eye surgery.
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Optometric terms Cataract: Clouding of the natural lens of the eye Usually caused by: Aging – most likely cause Other risk factors: Exposure to the sun's UV rays Smoking Steroid intake Diabetes. Symptoms include blurred vision, glare, halos around lights, colors that are less bright, a cloudy spot in your vision and, sometimes, temporary vision improvement. Intraocular lens (IOL) Artificial lens that a cataract surgeon places in a patient's eye after removing the eye's natural lens. Like a contact lens, it has a built-in refractive power tailored specifically to the patient's visual condition. http://www.opted.org/files/public/Eyes_Have_it_Career_Guide_-_FINAL_02_10.pdf
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Optometric terms Low vision Also called partial sight. Sight that cannot be satisfactorily corrected with glasses, contacts, or surgery. Low vision usually results from an eye disease such as glaucoma or macular degeneration. Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) Disorder characterized by changes in the eye's macula that result in the gradual loss of central vision. The exact cause is unknown, but appears to be related to a genetic predisposition, smoking and several other risk factors. Central vision may be blurred, distorted or shadowy before vision loss occurs. http://www.opted.org/files/public/Eyes_Have_it_Career_Guide_-_FINAL_02_10.pdf
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Optometric terms Intraocular pressure (IOP): Eye pressure, as determined by the amount of aqueous humor filling it. High IOP (ocular hypertension) can be a sign of glaucoma Diabetic retinopathy Leaking of retinal blood vessels in advanced or long-term diabetes, affecting the macula or retina. Most people have no symptoms at first, but can develop blurred near vision, double vision, floaters, and retinal/vitreous hemorrhages. In later stages, you can also suffer vision loss.
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Optometry Faculty In responding to the needs of the Palestinian people, An-Najah National University added the Faculty of Optometry to it 19 existing Faculties in 2004 Today the Faculty has 90 students It is the only Faculty of Optometry in Palestine and is a full member at the World ld Council of Optometry
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Optometry Faculty http://www.najah.edu/page/626
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Optometry Faculty http://www.najah.edu/page/626
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Program Goals Goals: Offer a professional scientific education in Optometry for the students of Palestine. Offer a scientific and educational environment for researchers in Optometry. Offer a base to develop academic and professional experiences in Optometry. Offer medical treatment to patients in Palestine. Improve a professional and academic level of workers in the field of Optometry.
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Advisory Plan At the end of the program, the students will receive a Bachelor of Science Degree in Optometry Graduation requirements for the BSc. Degree in optometry: The students have to complete 159 credit hours distributed as follows: 20 credit hours compulsory elective courses 6 University credit hours elective courses 133 credit hours Faculty requirements http://www.najah.edu/page/1360
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Advisory Plan http://www.najah.edu/page/1360
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Advisory Plan http://www.najah.edu/page/1360
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Advisory Plan http://www.najah.edu/page/1360
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Advisory Plan http://www.najah.edu/page/1360
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Academic Staff Dean: Dr. Anwar Dudin Dean of the Medical School Assistant Professors: Dr. Khereyah Fakhri Ebraheem Al-kharoof PHD in Vision Science from UK She now serves as the President Assistant for International Affairs Dr. Liana Mohammed Abdulllah Labadi Doctor of Optometry Dr. Mazen Mohammad Ali Mahfooth Khowaira Doctor of Medicine- Ophthalmology Medical degree from Al-Quds University; Residency from Jordan University
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Academic Staff Visiting Professors: Professor Adel Khudarieh Bachelor of Optometry degree from UK New Professors: Dr. Mohammad Shehadeh Doctor of Medicine- Ophthalmology Medical degree from Al-Quds University; Residency from Jordan University Dr. Mohammad Aqawi Doctor of Medicine- Ophthalmology Medical degree from Al-Quds University; Residency from Jordan University
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Optometric terms Accommodation : Eye's ability to automatically change focus from seeing at one distance to seeing at another. Binocular vision: Ability of both eyes to work together to achieve proper focus, depth perception and range of vision Diplopia: Also called double vision. When two images of the same object are perceived by one or both eyes. i.e. when someone sees two instead of one http://www.opted.org/files/public/Eyes_Have_it_Career_Guide_-_FINAL_02_10.pdf
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Optometric terms Single vision: A lens that has the same power throughout the entire lens, in contrast to a bifocal or multifocal lens that has more than one lens power. Reading glasses : Also called readers. Glasses to help with close work, particularly for people who are presbyopic Multifocal: Type of spectacle lens, IOL, or contact lens design that includes more than one area through which the eye focuses. Examples are bifocals or trifocals. This enables sight at multiple distances, typically for people with presbyopia Bifocal: Lens with one segment for near vision and one segment for far vision. Can apply to both spectacle lenses and contact lenses Progressive lenses : Also called progressive addition lenses or PALs. Multifocal lenses whose corrective powers change progressively throughout the lens. A wearer looks through one portion of the lens for distance vision, another for intermediate vision, and a third portion for reading or close work. Each area is blended invisibly into the next, without the lines that traditional bifocals Trifocal: Similar to PALs but with visible lines on the glasses http://www.opted.org/files/public/Eyes_Have_it_Career_Guide_-_FINAL_02_10.pdf
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Optometric terms Peripheral vision: The edges of your visual field. Refractive surgery: Surgery that corrects visual acuity, with the objective of reducing or eliminating the need for glasses and contacts. Includes radial keratotomy, PRK, LASIK, and corneal implants. Soft contact lenses : Contacts made of gel-like plastic containing varying amounts of water. RGP (Rigid Gas Permeable): Type of contact lens made of breathable plastic that is custom-fit to the shape of the cornea. RGPs are the successor to old-fashioned hard lenses, which are now virtually obsolete. Toric: A lens design with two different optical powers at right angles to each other for the correction of astigmatism. http://www.opted.org/files/public/Eyes_Have_it_Career_Guide_-_FINAL_02_10.pdf
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