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STOP THE LONG HOURS YOU POSSIBLY CAN BECOME CROSS-EYED

Young people may be at risk of becoming cross-eyed from using smartphones for long periods, two      prominent medical associations in Japan warned. The Japanese Association of   Pediatric Ophthalmology and the Japanese Association for Strabismus and Amblyopia (JASA) announced research results      regarding acute internal strabismus in June.

The two academic groups will conduct a full investigation as early as this autumn to establish measures for treatment and prevention.

A link between staring at small screens such as those of smartphones for long periods and developing acute internal strabismus was cited previously in a thesis by a Korean research team and by others. But no scientific proof has been yet found that it causes the condition.

Between January and February, the two Japanese groups surveyed 1,083 of their members, including child eye       doctors, asking if they had examined    patients with acute internal strabismus, aged 5 to 35.

More than 40 percent, or 158 of the 371 doctors who responded, said they had examined patients during the year who had become cross-eyed.

Of the 158, 122 doctors, nearly 80 percent, said they had treated patients who they suspected contracted the        condition from using digital devices such as smartphones.

Thirty-seven doctors examined patients whose symptoms improved after they stopped using the devices. “It’s quite a surprise that more than 40 percent of the eye doctors had those patients,” and all responded the same about their patients. “It used to be such a rare disease that an eye doctor would usually examine only one patient every few years.”

A student, 17, was obsessed with online games. The Aichi Prefecture          third-year high school student played them while holding his phone close to his face for five to seven hours after arriving home from school.

In autumn that year, he            experienced double vision, seeing two clocks         overlapping on the wall of his classroom at school. He tried blinking, but his vision didn’t return to normal.

Riding his bicycle home from school he saw an oncoming car as two cars. He found closing his left eye        eliminated one of them and he rode the rest of the way with his left eye shut.

His condition continued for more than a month, causing him to experience tired eyes and headaches. After            commuting to a university hospital several times for consultations, he was diagnosed with acute internal strabismus.

Doctors, said his condition was likely caused by long hours of using smartphones. “Some people only get better if they stop using their phones. At least take 30-minute breaks when you’re using them,” he was told.

The young man quit playing online games. He still uses his smartphone for two hours a day or so but not           continuously.

Gradually, his double vision    lessened. But his eyesight didn’t return to normal completely until he underwent surgery.

Anyone can develop symptoms. Smartphone habits aren’t unique among young people in his generation.

According to data compiled by the Cabinet Office, 30 percent of 17-year-old male teens surf the Internet for more than five hours a day on their smartphones or other devices. The average usage was four hours.

“Anyone can develop acute     internal strabismus, “Don’t spend long periods staring at your phone, especially with your face close to the screen.” Until now, cases of acute internal strabismus were rare, usually occurring due to such conditions as brain tumors.

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