Eye muscles getting more cross eyed with one eye shooting?
Posted: Sat Nov 04, 2017 12:40 pm
Starting to notice that my eye muscle is getting more imbalanced lately.
Just wondering if it is related to one eye dominant shooting.
Cover one eye, then the other eye. Moving patch from eye to eye showed that my image jumped up and also moved inward.
Talked to one ophthalmologist friend, he said it is all in my head. Talk to another friend who is world expert in neuro-ophthalmology; now, he wants a brain MRI to make sure. He said a guy in mid-50's should not have new onset strabismus (cross eye).
I think, it is from too focused one eye on front sight. The other eye is left drifting out there, over time causing slight lazy eye on that side.
Just wonder if it is a problem amongst shooters?
Do you have slight crossed eye muscle imbalance from long term one eye focus on front sight?
If many shooters do notice that slight lazy eye symptom, might be worthwhile to do a prospective study on the shooters at the Olympic center and get it published.
Just wondering if it is related to one eye dominant shooting.
Cover one eye, then the other eye. Moving patch from eye to eye showed that my image jumped up and also moved inward.
Talked to one ophthalmologist friend, he said it is all in my head. Talk to another friend who is world expert in neuro-ophthalmology; now, he wants a brain MRI to make sure. He said a guy in mid-50's should not have new onset strabismus (cross eye).
I think, it is from too focused one eye on front sight. The other eye is left drifting out there, over time causing slight lazy eye on that side.
Just wonder if it is a problem amongst shooters?
Do you have slight crossed eye muscle imbalance from long term one eye focus on front sight?
If many shooters do notice that slight lazy eye symptom, might be worthwhile to do a prospective study on the shooters at the Olympic center and get it published.