TOP 15 UNKNOWNS ABOUT HUMAN EYE HEALTH

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WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT THE BEST UNKNOWNS FOR HEALTHIER EYE’S HEALTH

  1. Eye diseases specialist Op., who pointed out that today’s world is full of false information on the internet. top Turkish Eye Op. Dr. “Everyone who is knowledgeable and uninformed is expressing opinions about a topic for ‘unproven content’ and even blogging. “If you add the forums to that, right and wrong are mixed,” he said.
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  2. Op. Dr. “If you have a wife and friend who also handles superstitions and urban legends outside the Internet, it becomes difficult to decide what is right and wrong,” Turkey eye doctor explains describing the right known mistakes about eye health.
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  3. Does eye twitching mean jinx? Eye twitching is caused by fatigue of the muscles around the eyes and partly due to a lack of vitamins or minerals. If there is twitching, put a finger on the twitching area and rub it for a minute, then the Twitch will pass. If there is a constant eye movement, that is, if it continues without stopping and the complaint increases in light, this condition is a disease that needs to be treated.
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  4. Squinting the eyes causes it to stay that way: Novelization is one of the muscle exercises of the eye, and the eye does not stay that way. There are six novices in each eye that provide movement. They all act in harmony with each other. If one works too hard, the other steps in and fixes it. Strabismus is caused by the need for glasses or because the eye muscles do not work well.
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  5. When you cry a lot, the eye dries: When you cry a lot, the eye doesn’t dry out. Running out of water in the eye is not an event that can be achieved by crying. 2/3 of man is water. If we ran out of water crying, the human body would melt and dry. Crying at the dose is a pretty good feeling. The eye is washed, the tear glands work, small blockages in the ducts that produce eye water are opened, and the person relaxes mentally. Because after crying, hormones that regulate the neurological system begin to be secreted. In extreme crying, everything reverses and all these systems begin to deteriorate.
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  6.  Squeezing lemon into eyes is beneficial for eye health: Citric acid in lemon partially narrows eye vessels, giving them shine, but disrupts the structure of the transparent layer we call the cornea. Eating or drinking lemon is extremely useful. The ingredients in it are anticancer and antioxidant.
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  7. Reading books in the dark distorts the eyes: This is partly true. Our eyes are an optical organ. He sees in the light as he can see in the dark. But the reading is adjusted according to the light environment. During reading, the eye sees better with good lighting from the top, and the eye muscles do not contract excessively to see and fatigue. In children, reading in the dark makes eye fatigue. Trying to read in the dark over the age of 40 is quite difficult and you unnecessarily strain and tire your eye muscles and optical structure.
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  8. Garlic on shallots is very good: Shallot is a microbial inflammation of the meibomian gland in the eyelids. It starts with pain. In garlic, there are no antibiotics. But antibiotics are produced from garlic in pharmaceutical industry. So this process is a chemical event.
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  9. Garlic contains 17 types of amino acids: They are not synthesized by the body, they must be taken from the outside. In addition, organic and inorganic substances and 33 kinds of sulfur, zinc, vitamins A, C and B1 are found. Garlic increases natural immunity not by rubbing, but by eating. Because for that, it has to react in the human body. Treatment of shallots is frequent hot dressings and eye drops with antibiotics.
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  10.  If a tear flows through the right eye: Is it happiness, if it flows through the left eye, is it pain? Of course, no. A tear is a liquid secreted from a gland that sits on the bone under the eyebrow, called the lacrimal gland, and contains more than 60 proteins and protective materials that nourish the eye. Right and left tear gland fluid are identical. Both tear glands are stimulated from the same area of the brain. Happy tears and bitter tears are also reflexively secreted from both the right and left.
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  11. Eye number advances when wearing glasses: Wearing glasses does not advance or stop the number. Just to see if it helps. Some myopia or astigmatism and near visual impairment disease are progressive. When you give these patients glasses, you determine the number on the day of the examination. However, when these eyes that we are talking about progress as numbers over time, new number glasses will be required. Here, patients think that when they wear glasses, the glasses make this progress in their own eyes, whereas wearing glasses does not reduce or advance the number.
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  12. Watching TV closely distorts the eye: Children watch television closely because the focus is close. Because he’ll want to look at it from the distance he sees best. This condition does not disrupt the eye, but can cause eye fatigue in children. Adults, on the other hand, should watch from the distance they see best, with or without glasses, depending on the size of the TV. In both groups, watching very closely will tire the eye.
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  13. The term Eye Boot is incorrect: The laser does not scratch the eye, ablation, that is, vaporizes the tissue, causing tissue loss. Eye drawing is a radial keratotomy applied in the 1970s and 80s and is abandoned today.
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  14. Laser procedure to get rid of glasses is only one time: This issue depends on the thickness of the cornea of the eye and the number of glasses. If the patient’s cornea thickness is appropriate, that is, thick, he can do excimer laser several times and get rid of his glasses or lens.
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  15. Strabismus seen in infants passes spontaneously in the future: Incorrect in its entirety. Strabismus is due to the need for glasses or an eye novelization. Strabismus should be seen by a specialist and its treatment should be started.
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President of Organ Transplant Center at MedicalPark Hospital Antalya

Turkey's world-renowned organ transplant specialist. Dr. Demirbaş has 104 international publications and 102 national publications.

Physician's Resume:

Born on August 7, 1963 in Çorum, Prof. Dr. Alper Demirbaş has been continuing his work as the President of MedicalPark Antalya Hospital Organ Transplantation Center since 2008.

Prof. who performed the first tissue incompatible kidney transplant in Turkey, the first blood type incompatible kidney transplant, the first kidney-pancreas transplant program and the first cadaveric donor and live donor liver transplant in Antalya. Dr. As of August 2016, Alper Demirbaş has performed 4900 kidney transplants, 500 liver transplants and 95 pancreas transplants.

In addition to being the chairman of 6 national congresses, he has also been an invited speaker at 12 international and 65 national scientific congresses. Dr. Alper Demirbaş was married and the father of 1 girl and 1 boy.

Awards:

Eczacibasi Medical Award of 2002, Akdeniz University Service Award of 2005, Izder Medical Man of the Year Award of 2006, BÖHAK Medical Man of the Year Award of 2007, Sabah Mediterranean Newspaper Scientist of the Year Award of 2007, ANTIKAD Scientist of the Year Award of 2009, Social Ethics Association Award of 2010, Işık University Medical Man of the Year Award of 2015, VTV Antalya's Brand Value Award of 2015.

Certificates:

Doctor of Medicine Degree Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine Ankara, General Surgeon Ministry of Health Turkey EKFMG (0-477-343-8), University of Miami School of Medicine Member of Multiple Organ Transplant, ASTS Multiorgan Transplant Scholarship. Lecturer at Kyoto University. Lecturer at University of Essen, Research assistant at the University of Cambridge .

Professional Members:

American Society of Transplant Surgeons, American Transplantation Society Nominated, Middle East and Southern Africa Council Transplantation Society 2007, International Liver Transplantation Association, Turkish Transplantation Association, Turkish Society of Surgery, Turkish Hepatobiliary Surgery Association.

Disclaimer:

Our website contents consist of articles approved by our Web and Medical Editorial Board with the contributions of our physicians. Our contents are prepared only for informational purposes for public benefit. Be sure to consult your doctor for diagnosis and treatment.
Medically Reviewed by Professor Doctor Alper Demirbaş
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