Phone Icon
760.340.4700

35900 Bob Hope Drive
Ste 175
Rancho Mirage, California 92270

Can You Have Presbyopia and Cataracts?

Is your vision blurry? Do you need more light to read?

You may have presbyopia or cataracts. As you grow older, your eyes undergo changes that can affect your vision.

Two of the most common age-related eye conditions that may develop after age forty are cataracts and presbyopia. Keep reading to learn more about whether you can have presbyopia and cataracts!

Can You Have Both Presbyopia and Cataracts?

You can have cataracts and presbyopia at the same time, particularly as you grow older. Most people with cataracts also have presbyopia, as both are common in individuals over age forty.

Although presbyopia and cataracts affect the eye’s lens, they are not the same condition. However, because they can happen simultaneously, it may be challenging to differentiate the symptoms.

Here’s how you can tell the two apart:

Their Causes

Although presbyopia and cataracts often occur together as we age, their origins within the eye differ significantly. To better understand these conditions and their impact on vision, it’s important to examine the unique factors that lead to their development.

Cataracts

A cataract is the clouding of the lens. It occurs when proteins break down and clump together inside the eye’s lens.

A cataract usually progresses slowly, clouding more and more of your lens over time. It causes the light to scatter and prevents it from properly passing through the lens, causing blurred vision and other symptoms.

Cataracts can form in both eyes but don’t typically advance at the same rate. Usually, cataracts develop slowly and don’t cause noticeable vision changes.

But with time, they affect vision, making it challenging to see the expressions on a person’s face, drive, read, cook, watch TV, and run errands.

Presbyopia

Presbyopia, also known as age-related farsightedness, occurs when your eye’s lens gradually loses its ability to see nearby objects clearly. The lens changes shape to focus light accurately on the retina so you can see clearly.

When you’re young, the lens is flexible and can easily change shape, allowing you to focus on objects far away and up close. But after age forty, the lens hardens and can no longer change shape as easily to focus on up-close images, causing them to appear blurry.

Presbyopia is a normal part of aging that typically starts after age forty and continues to worsen until age sixty-five. With presbyopia, you may find yourself holding reading materials and your phone at arm’s length to see the letters and images clearly.

Their Symptoms 

Some of the symptoms of presbyopia and cataracts overlap. They include:

Cataracts

As cataracts grow larger and affect more of the lens, you may experience symptoms such as:

  • Blurred or cloudy vision
  • Halos
  • Poor night vision
  • Seeing double in one eye
  • Sensitivity to glare and light
  • Frequent prescription changes
  • Colors appearing muted, muddy, or faded
  • Watery eyes (the body’s response to dry, irritated eyes)
  • Need for brighter lighting for up-close activities like reading

Presbyopia

Over time, you may experience the following symptoms:

  • Blurred close-up vision
  • Needing more light when reading
  • Holding reading materials further away to make words clearer
  • Headaches, eyestrain, and fatigue, especially after performing up-close work

Their Risk Factors

While age is a primary factor in both conditions, various lifestyle and health-related elements can influence the development of cataracts and presbyopia.

Cataracts

Most cataracts are a result of aging. Cataracts can also form earlier due to certain risk factors, including:

  • Obesity
  • Smoking
  • Diabetes
  • Heavy alcohol use
  • High blood pressure
  • Family history of cataracts
  • Previous eye injury or surgery
  • Prolonged use of corticosteroid medicines
  • Too much exposure to UV radiation from the sun

Presbyopia

Like cataracts, age is the biggest risk factor for presbyopia. However, certain factors can increase your risk of developing presbyopia early before age forty.

This is called premature presbyopia, and the risk factors include:

  • Being farsighted
  • Health conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, or multiple sclerosis
  • Certain medications, such as diuretics, antihistamines, and antidepressants

What Are the Treatment Options for Presbyopia?

The treatment options for presbyopia include reading glasses. They help bring nearby objects into sharper focus, enabling you to read the menu, thread a needle, see the small print on the medicine bottles, and perform other close-up tasks.

While glasses improve your near vision, they can be inconvenient. If you’re tired of relying on glasses, you can have presbyopia corrected at the time of cataract surgery.

What are the Treatment Options for Cataracts?

Initially, stronger glasses or contact lens prescription and brighter lighting around your home can help you see better. But as cataracts advance, these temporary solutions will no longer help.

Cataract surgery is the only effective treatment for cataracts. The quick and safe outpatient procedure eliminates cataracts permanently and restores clear vision.

Before cataract surgery, you’ll choose an intraocular lens (IOL). An IOL is a synthetic lens that replaces your natural lens during cataract surgery.

Your cataract surgeon will help you select an IOL that best meets your vision needs and lifestyle, such as correcting presbyopia. Various IOLs can fix presbyopia, including the PanOptix trifocal lens.

The PanOptix delivers an outstanding range of high-definition vision at near, intermediate, and far-away distances without blurry zones while also minimizing glare. With this revolutionary IOL, you’ll eliminate or significantly reduce the need for glasses after cataract surgery.

 

During cataract surgery, your surgeon will remove the natural lens with a cataract and implant an artificial IOL like the PanOptix in its place. The new IOL helps you regain any vision lost to cataracts and addresses presbyopia simultaneously.

Achieve Crystal Clear Vision

If you suspect you have cataracts and presbyopia, Dr. Tokuhara from Desert Vision Center can help. After a thorough evaluation, he’ll determine the next best step to ensure you regain sharp, clear vision.

Is poor vision getting in the way of everyday activities? Schedule your appointment at Desert Vision Center in Rancho Mirage, CA, and get help with your blurry vision!

Are you a candidate for cataract surgery?
take our cataract self-test

Contact Us

35900 Bob Hope Drive
Suite 175
Rancho Mirage, California 92270

Phone: (760) 340-4700