If you haven’t read my story about losing my central vision in one of my eyes, you can read it by clicking here.

I am often asked what I can actually see, because I have a rare eye disease that falls under the white dot syndrome spectrum, originally thought to be AZOOR, but currently without a name.

I have tricked several opticians into believing my vision is fine, because I can pass a regular field test without issue and my visions appear just fine when I go in for a check up and read the letters on the chart on the wall.

Describing your vision to someone else can be quite difficult, but I have documented my whole journey with losing my vision in my right eye and I feel like, a couple of years on, I can pretty accurately describe what my vision is like now it is stable.

This could still change. I could wake up one day and be back to the first day of vision loss, where I went blind in both eyes. I could lose some vision in my left eye. But, for now, this is what I can see.

I am missing my central vision in my right eye. If I look at someone sat in front of me, with my left eye closed, straight facing me, I probably can’t see your left eye, nose, cheek or left side of your face, depending on how close you are to me. When my left is open, my brain can pretty much fill in the gaps, but it’s hard work.

I also have patchy vision in my right eye. The only accurate way of describing my visual fields is to ask you to think of a leopard print pattern. Again, if I shut my left eye, I have patches in my right eye that mean I am missing small areas of vision all over my line of sight. These areas are very small, meaning my brain can fill in the gaps, but there are lots of them, covering all my vision. Some are slightly larger than others. I can pass a visual fields test at the opticians (the ones they do with the flashing lights), because these are very basic tests, with the lights spread quite far apart. However, with the more complicated tests at my city’s large specialist eye hospital, they were able to see how poor my vision was on a special field test that took a few hours.

I can no longer see straight lines. I find it hard to work from an excel spreadsheet and I can’t follow charts where you need to read along lines. Sometimes if I’m reading a book with quite a small font, I may accidentally skip to the line above or below half way through a sentence.

I can’t read text that is sideways or upside down anymore. I think this is because I can’t see in straight lines.

I am very light sensitive. I use a very strong blue light filter on my computer that makes my screen literally orange, with the brightness turned all the way down. My phone brightness is always on the lowest setting. I struggle to go outside in summer without sunglasses on – it amplifies my blind spot to the point where it leaves me almost completely blind in my right eye and I feel incredibly vulnerable. The same thing happens when I walk around the ‘lighting’ section of a shop, like B&Q where they have a display of lightbulbs and lampshades.

My left eye is tired. This means I need a larger font on my phone or PC at work. Sometimes, when my eyes are very tired, I can only read short text messages, because I can’t focus my eyes very well. I can’t watch telly very well in the evenings and I struggle to read later on.

I wear glasses. This doesn’t fix the vision in my right eye, but it helps with the strain on my left eye. This also allows me to see more towards the end of the day.

To read about my daily life with my eye disease, please click here.

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14 responses to “What Can I See? Living With An Eye Disease On The White Dot Syndrome Spectrum: The Vision Diaries”

  1. What I’ve Learned Living With A Visual Impairment Since 2019: The Vision Diaries – The Pain Corner Avatar

    […] If you experience vision loss in one of your eyes, your ‘good’ eye has to pick up the slack, will get tired more quickly than before and can be affected by the vision loss in your ‘bad’ eye when you have both eyes open. Lots of people, including my eye doctors(!), keep telling me I’m lucky that I have one good eye, but my poor ‘good’ eye needs a break too, which it will never get. Click here to read about what I can and can’t see with my eye disease. […]

    Like

  2. My Diagnosis Has Changed: The Vision Diaries – The Pain Corner Avatar

    […] I had a diagnosis for a rare eye disease called AZOOR and I’m supposed to have regular check ups at the hospital for this, but they’ve been a bit delayed due to the pandemic. […]

    Like

  3. TRACEY WILLIAMS Avatar
    TRACEY WILLIAMS

    Diagnosed with azoor and Graves eye and thyroid disease. After I got covid in August the viral load must have been too much and I’m now so fed up and miserable.

    Any news of things that have helped apart from steroids? I’m on antivirals too…for the past month thinking of asking for ivermectin as it may do something am aldi on medical mediums protocols xxx

    Liked by 1 person

    1. thepaincorner Avatar

      Hi Tracy,
      No news on any cures yet I’m afraid 😦
      K x

      Like

  4. Sabeer Avatar
    Sabeer

    Iam a person like you, struggling with Azoor in right eye. Life is hard.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. How My Rare Eye Disease AZOOR Affects My Daily Life: The Vision Diaries – The Pain Corner Avatar

    […] isn’t ‘normal’. I recently wrote about what I can and can’t see – you can read it the post by clicking here. I covered what I can actually see, but I didn’t speak about how my life is affected by my […]

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    […] my vision. I still can’t see properly out of one eye, but what I’m really struggling with is the vision being distorted, even more than the […]

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  7. Gaining Control: The Vision Diaries – The Pain Corner Avatar

    […] If you would like to read an update on my vision as of June 2021, please click here. […]

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    […] If you would like to read an update on my vision as of June 2021, please click here. […]

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    […] here for a DVLA vision test, but you can’t drive?‘ Luckily, I’m sure I passed that test with flying colours, because the visual fields test machine at any opticians is so basic that I don’t think they […]

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  10. The Chronic Pain & Disability Wedding Survival Guide – The Pain Corner Avatar

    […] you need any aids, use them. I have limited vision in my right eye, so my left eye has to work overtime for me to be able to see. I didn’t want to wear my […]

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  11. I Don’t Have A Migraine: The Worst Neurology Consultation – The Pain Corner Avatar

    […] my doctor and I agreed that it would be a pretty strange coincidence for me to have neuralgia, my eye issues and fatigue, muscle weakness, circulation problems and it not all add up to something else. She […]

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    […] tiredness has also affected my eyesight. I have rubbish eyesight anyway to say the least – my left eye is pulling all the weight and gets tired very easily. Now I’m exhausted […]

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