Lodi News-Sentinel

Do your eyes hurt after looking at solar eclipse?

- Carol Taylor and Julia James

Some might have taken a quick glance. Others may worry their eclipse glasses were defective, especially after a last-minute recall for eclipse glasses sold through Amazon. Or maybe you’re just a worrier.

Regardless, here’s how to tell if you might have eye damage from the solar eclipse and what to do about it.

Is it ever safe to look at the sun during an eclipse?

Experts say no. Staring at the sun for as little as 5 seconds can damage the eyes, and even longer can make the damage permanent.

Light enters the front of the eye and is focused onto the retina in the back of the eye. Photorecep­tors in the retina convert light into an electrical signal that travels to the brain, which interprets the signal. The intensity of direct sunlight forces the photorecep­tors in the retina to absorb high amounts of energy, damaging or killing them.

How long you can look at the sun before experienci­ng damage is not clear. Dimitrios Karamichos, executive director of the North Texas Eye Research Institute at the University of North Texas Health Science Center, previously told The Dallas Morning News permanent damage to the retina can happen in 60 to 100 seconds or less.

Vision problems may not be apparent until the next day, Karamichos said. Symptoms of this condition, called solar retinopath­y, include:

• Distortion.

• Dark spots in central vision.

• Loss of sharpness.

Can you treat solar retinopath­y?

There is no treatment for eye damage caused by the sun. The eye may recover on its own — or it may not. Even if vision improves, some distortion and dark spots may remain. But once photorecep­tors die, they are gone for good.

”They don’t divide; they don’t multiply,” Dr. Rafael Ufret-Vincenty, an associate professor in the ophthalmol­ogy department at UT Southweste­rn Medical Center previously told The News. “So once you lose them, you lose them.”

If you are experienci­ng any of the symptoms of solar retinopath­y, doctors told CBS you should immediatel­y contact an ophthalmol­ogist for an evaluation.

 ?? JUAN FIGUEROA/DALLAS MORNING NEWS ?? Avery Phillip, 5, of Frisco, Texas, tests her eclipse glasses at the Great North American Eclipse event at the Perot Museum of Nature and Science in Dallas on Monday.
JUAN FIGUEROA/DALLAS MORNING NEWS Avery Phillip, 5, of Frisco, Texas, tests her eclipse glasses at the Great North American Eclipse event at the Perot Museum of Nature and Science in Dallas on Monday.

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