At Johnson Eye Care, Thorough Eye Exams Are Just the Beginning!
Our optometry practice provides professional eye care and corrective vision services to patients ages 2 and up, and include comprehensive vision and eye care exams designed to identify the most optimal services for our patients individual and unique vision and eye care needs.
- Comprehensive eye exams (Adults & Children ages 2 and up)
- LASIK & Refractive Surgery Co-Management Care
- Dry Eye Diagnosis & Treatment
- Astigmatism Diagnosis & Treatment (Keratoconus)
- Glaucoma Diagnosis & Treatment
- Cataract Surgery Co-Management
- Pre- and post-operative co-management
Your eye exam includes diagnosis and treatment of eye disease and disorders, or referral to an appropriate specialist for treatment. Common conditions include:
Strabismus
One or both eyes may turn in, out, up or down. This can be detected in infancy or in adults.
Amblyopia
One eye does not see as well as the other eye.
Blepharitis
Excessive staph bacteria that builds up on the lids and lashes.
Dry Eye
Lack of tear production or evaporation of the tears from the surface of the eye. Symptoms can be blurred vision, redness, watering, burning, itching, foreign body sensation ,contact lens discomfort.
Allergies
Irritation of the eye due to the environment or chemicals. Symptoms can include itching, blurred vision, redness, watering, foreign body sensation, contact lens discomfort.
Cataracts
The natural lens inside of the eye ages and changes from a clear structure to a cloudy yellowish to brown color causing blurred vision.
Vitreous Floaters
Small pieces of protein fibers that have been broken down in the vitreous gel and “float” around in the back of the eye.
Glaucoma
Loss of peripheral vision due to damage of the optic nerve in the back of the eye that can be caused by increased eye pressure or decreased blood flow to the optic nerve.
Macular Degeneration
Loss of central vision due to damage of the cells in the macula. There are 2 forms of macular degeneration: dry and wet.
Diabetic Retinopathy
Fluctuating blood sugar creates stress on the small blood vessels in the back of the eye (retina) which cause leakage of blood and protein in the retina. This can cause mild to severe vision loss and potential blindness.
Hypertensive Retinopathy
Like diabetes, high blood pressure affects the blood vessels in the retina and can cause leakage of blood and protein in the retina as well as lack of oxygen to the retina. This can also cause mild to severe vision loss and potential blindness.