The brain is an extremely complex organ that controls countless body functions. Depending on the location and extent of brain tissue affected due to your stroke, you may have different vision issues, such as reading problems, poor visual memory, and decreased depth perception and balance. Vision is more than just sight. It’s the process of your brain that derives meaning from what you see. Vision perceives colour, size, and shape, and understands the significance of what is in front of us.
A stroke may cause vision loss.
• About 65% of stroke survivors may have vision problems.
• Most people who experience vision loss due to a stroke don’t fully regain their vision. But at least some recovery is possible.
• Proper diagnosis and vision rehabilitation can help you recover and improve most daily activities.
Why do visual changes happen after a stroke? Vision complications due to a stroke depend on where in the brain the stroke took place.
Areas of your brain that affect visual processing include:
• Occipital lobe – Most visual processing happens in this area in the back of the brain. It’s the main vision center in the brain, but all of the brain lobes get visual information.
• Brain Stem – Located in the base of the brain, this area controls eye movements, feelings related to balance and stability, and your ability to recognize and understand objects. Types of vision loss: Strokes can regularly cause loss of some of the visual field — the whole area we see in front of us — that’s often called field cuts. Any of the following can create challenges with daily activities, such as reading, general mobility, and recognizing people or objects.
• Homonymous hemianopia – The loss of vision in the right or left half of the visual field in each eye.
• Homonymous quadrantanopia – The loss of the upper or lower quarter of the visual field.
• Scotoma – A blind spot in one or both eyes.
Other visual challenges after a stroke:
• Neglect (spatial inattention) – People with neglect don’t respond to, and aren’t aware of, things on their stroke-affected side. This problem isn’t related to vision, but results from damage to parts of the brain that perceive and interpret vision.
• Eye movement disorders – This happens when the nerves or muscles that make your eyes move are damaged.
Examples in stroke survivors include rapid eye jiggling (nystagmus), eye turning (strabismus), eye tracking control issues (oculomotor dysfunction), and double vision (diplopia). Your depth perception, balance, coordination, and overall vision may be affected by these.
• Dry eyes – Some survivors have trouble blinking or not fully closing their eyes, and as a result, the eyes don’t stay moist enough. When this happens, dry eyes can develop and you can experience irritation, burning, or blurry vision. How can I manage these changes? Eye doctors (ophthalmologists and optometrists), brain doctors (neurologists), and brain-eye doctor specialists (neuro-ophthalmologists and neuro-optometrists) can diagnose vision problems and develop a treatment plan. These plans may involve a variety of rehabilitation therapies and often have a goal of helping survivors better compensate for losses and regain as much function as possible. Examples of available therapies include: • Scanning – One of the most common types of visual therapies, it helps train the eyes to better scan toward and away from areas of vision loss.
Stroke and Vision Changes