Loading...

Lazy Eye & Squint Services

Specialized Care for Amblyopia (Lazy Eye) & Strabismus (Squint)

Lazy Eye (Amblyopia) is reduced vision in one eye due to poor brain-eye communication, often treatable in childhood. Squint (Strabismus) is a misalignment of the eyes where they point in different directions.

Our services include precise pediatric and adult eye evaluations, non-surgical management such as **patching and vision therapy**, and advanced surgical correction of the eye muscles to restore proper alignment and enhance binocular vision.

+91 98765 43210

Book a pediatric eye exam for early intervention.
Amblyopia Patching Therapy

Amblyopia Treatment

Effective treatment plans using patching, atropine drops, and spectacle correction to strengthen the weaker eye.

Squint Diagnosis

Precise Squint Diagnosis

Detailed measurement of the angle of misalignment and assessment of binocular function.

Strabismus Eye Surgery

Squint Surgery (Strabismus)

Surgical adjustment of the eye muscles to correct aesthetic and functional eye alignment in all age groups.

Vision Therapy for Squint

Orthoptics & Therapy

Non-surgical exercises (orthoptics) to improve eye coordination, focusing, and depth perception.

Frequently Asked Questions About Lazy Eye & Squint

The best results for Amblyopia are achieved when treatment begins early, ideally **before the age of 7 or 8**, while the visual system is still developing. However, treatment can still be beneficial for older children and some adults.

No. Some types of squint, particularly those related to uncorrected refractive error, can be fully or partially corrected with **glasses or prisms**. Surgery is reserved for cases where alignment cannot be fixed non-surgically.

Squint surgery involves carefully weakening or strengthening one or more of the six eye muscles to change the eye's alignment. The surgery is performed on the outside of the eyeball and the patient usually goes home the same day.

While the brain's plasticity is lower, recent advances in **vision therapy** and perceptual learning techniques have shown that adults can often achieve significant improvement in visual acuity, especially if combined with addressing the underlying cause.