High myopia: severe nearsightedness

High myopia: severe nearsightedness

What is high myopia?

High myopia is the medical term for extreme or severe nearsightedness. Myopia is a type of refractive error, and lens prescriptions for refractive errors are measured in units called diopters. A person who needs a vision prescription of -6.00 diopters (D) or more has high myopia.

High myopia can exponentially increase a person's risk of developing sight-threatening eye disease. It's very important to manage myopia progression during childhood, before it becomes high myopia.

Myopia progression and stabilization

Myopia typically begins during early childhood and progresses over time. The peak years of myopia progression are roughly between ages 7 and 15.5. However, it can begin earlier and last longer.

The earlier a child develops myopia, the greater the progression and the greater the chance of developing high myopia.

For about 50% of people, myopia stabilizes by age 15, but it can progress until around age 24 for others. If it progresses to a measurement of -6.00 D or greater, that is considered high myopia. Low and moderate myopia fall between -0.25 D and -5.75 D.

SEE RELATED: Is your child at risk for myopia?

High myopia causes

Nearsightedness primarily occurs as the result of a slightly elongated eyeball shape. When the eyeball is too long, light focuses too far in front of the retina. This causes distant objects to look blurry.

People with high myopia have a longer eyeball shape than people with low or mild myopia. This means light focuses even farther away from their retinas and makes distance vision extremely blurry.

Inherited genes can play a role in the development of high myopia. Children have a greater risk of developing the condition when one or both parents have nearsightedness.

Severe myopia does not generally lead to vision loss on its own. Instead, the progressive lengthening of the eyeball stretches and thins the retina and other eye tissues. This makes them more vulnerable to damage and disease.

Studies have shown that the risk for these complications increases drastically the more myopic a person becomes:

Myopia Simulator

People with high myopia are also at an increased risk of developing pathological myopia .

Pathological myopia (also called malignant or degenerative myopia) is not as common as low or high myopia. It affects only about 3% of the world’s population. Even so, it is the seventh leading cause of legal blindness in America. In pathological myopia, progression and loss of vision can be quick and severe.

It’s essential that people with high myopia have routine dilated eye exams. Their eye doctors need to monitor them for signs of any complications caused by high myopia.

If your child's myopia is worsening, ask your eye doctor about the myopia control methods available in your area. Myopia control can slow or halt the progression of nearsightedness.

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High myopia: severe nearsightedness

High myopia: severe nearsightedness

What is high myopia?

High myopia is the medical term for extreme or severe nearsightedness. Myopia is a type of refractive error, and lens prescriptions for refractive errors are measured in units called diopters. A person who needs a vision prescription of -6.00 diopters (D) or more has high myopia.

High myopia can exponentially increase a person's risk of developing sight-threatening eye disease. It's very important to manage myopia progression during childhood, before it becomes high myopia.

Myopia progression and stabilization

Myopia typically begins during early childhood and progresses over time. The peak years of myopia progression are roughly between ages 7 and 15.5. However, it can begin earlier and last longer.

The earlier a child develops myopia, the greater the progression and the greater the chance of developing high myopia.

For about 50% of people, myopia stabilizes by age 15, but it can progress until around age 24 for others. If it progresses to a measurement of -6.00 D or greater, that is considered high myopia. Low and moderate myopia fall between -0.25 D and -5.75 D.

SEE RELATED: Is your child at risk for myopia?

High myopia causes

Nearsightedness primarily occurs as the result of a slightly elongated eyeball shape. When the eyeball is too long, light focuses too far in front of the retina. This causes distant objects to look blurry.

People with high myopia have a longer eyeball shape than people with low or mild myopia. This means light focuses even farther away from their retinas and makes distance vision extremely blurry.

Inherited genes can play a role in the development of high myopia. Children have a greater risk of developing the condition when one or both parents have nearsightedness.

Severe myopia does not generally lead to vision loss on its own. Instead, the progressive lengthening of the eyeball stretches and thins the retina and other eye tissues. This makes them more vulnerable to damage and disease.

Studies have shown that the risk for these complications increases drastically the more myopic a person becomes:

Myopia Simulator

People with high myopia are also at an increased risk of developing pathological myopia .

Pathological myopia (also called malignant or degenerative myopia) is not as common as low or high myopia. It affects only about 3% of the world’s population. Even so, it is the seventh leading cause of legal blindness in America. In pathological myopia, progression and loss of vision can be quick and severe.

It’s essential that people with high myopia have routine dilated eye exams. Their eye doctors need to monitor them for signs of any complications caused by high myopia.

If your child's myopia is worsening, ask your eye doctor about the myopia control methods available in your area. Myopia control can slow or halt the progression of nearsightedness.

More Articles
A young boy wearing glasses gets help with his homework

Myopia (nearsightedness): Causes, progression and management

Myopia is often called nearsightedness. If your eyes are myopic, this means distant objects look blurry. Learn more about myopia progression and management.

woman getting an eye exam checking for degenerative myopia

Pathologic myopia: What does it mean if myopia is degenerative?

Pathologic myopia is a type of myopia, not a degree of severity. Learn how pathologic myopia differs from degenerative myopia and high myopia.

How does a concave lens correct nearsightedness?

A concave lens corrects nearsightedness by diverging the light rays entering the eye so that they focus directly on the retina instead of in front of it.

What type of lens is used to correct nearsightedness?

Corrective lenses for myopia (nearsightedness) include eyeglass lenses and contact lenses. Learn how these lenses work and how to read your prescription.

Hyperopia and myopia corrected by lens

Myopia vs. hyperopia: What’s the difference?

Myopia and hyperopia are two kinds of refractive error that cause blurry vision. Learn which one causes nearsighted vs. farsighted vision.

a person getting an eye exam to check for myopia

Progressive myopia: Risk factors, complications and what parents can do

Progressive myopia is nearsightedness that gets worse over time. Learn about the risk factors for progressive myopia and its potential complications.

What is myopia control, and how does it work?

Find out how myopia control eyeglasses, contact lenses, eye drops and habit changes can reduce children’s risk for myopia development and progression.

Does myopia progression stop after a certain age?

Myopia severity, age of onset, heredity and lifestyle all impact what age myopia stops progressing. Most cases of myopia stabilize by age 15 to 20 years.

Is nearsightedness genetic?

Myopia and other refractive errors in vision can be genetic, but there are other factors. Learn about the genetic and lifestyle aspects of nearsightedness.

woman using the 20-20-20 rule and looking away from her laptop for 20 seconds

The 20-20-20 rule: Strategies for easing eye strain

The 20-20-20 rule relieves eye strain by reminding you to look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds every 20 minutes.