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The majority of those who suffer from visual snow, also have tinnitus. Tinnitus is a ringing, whooshing, persistant noise that seems to come from the ear or head. Nearly 36 million Americans suffer from this disorder. Tinnitus is much more common than visual snow, but the two seem to be closely linked. Tinnitus is hearing what others can not, while visual snow is seeing what others can not. Tinnitus can come from any of the four sections of the ear: the outer ear, the middle ear, the inner ear, and the brain. While some tinnitus is normal it should not disrupt you or be apparant in situations where there is noise. When you can hear it all the time, you level of tinnitus is elevated. A common cause of tinnitus is damage to the microscopic endings of the hearing nerve in the inner ear. Currently, like visual snow, there is no treatment for tinnitus. Research is being conducted to try and find a cure. |
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Reading with VS is extremely hard to do. Words seem to wave and jump off the page. They almost seem to glow off of the white background. I don't read for pleasure anymore. I read my children their story at night, and am grateful for the illustrations on the pages, which break up the jumble of words. Reading glasses do not help, nor are needed. |
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I am please to say that we have raised $4664.80 since we opened the Eye on Vision Foundation. While this is a fantastic start, we have far to go. Right now we are trying to raise $15,000 for a visual snow research project. We are also working towards bringing in $80,000 for a floaters research project, and another $20,000 for a macular degeneration project. Please keep the donations coming in, and don't forget to tell your friends and family about the website and the foundation! |
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EOVF is in talks with U.S. based doctors for Phase I research to begin on visual snow. There would first be a case series review. The doctor would go through hundreds of patient charts to find cases of VS that they have seen at the University. Then make a systematic analysis of what they do and don't have in common. |
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Photophobia, or light sensitivity, is one of the common symptoms that is associated with visual snow. It is an intolerance of light. Headlights, sunlight, fluorescent bulbs, incandescent light, and camera flashes can all be very bothersome to the eye. You may need to squint or close your eyes to escape it, and are often left with a persistent after-image. |
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When a person develops floaters, they first ask their doctor for a treatment. When a treatment is not offered (because there isn't one), the patient tends to surf the net for alternate treatments. I did the same myself, and please take my word on this. There is no herbor vitamin out there that is going to improve or eliminate your floaters. The following have been tried by many sufferers without the slightest improvement. |
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