Interview with Dr. Alexander Leube, Optometrist and Visual Scientist at the ZEISS Vision Science Lab in Tübingen (Germany)
We are getting older every day – and so are our eyes. So do our eyes really change all the time, i.e. as we turn 30, 40 or 50?
Yes, that’s a fact. Our eyes are subject to normal physiological processes that never stop. In particular, this concerns the ability of our visual system to focus on nearby objects, which worsens as we get older. This is a gradual process that is already present at around the time we turn 30 – and it becomes apparent at 40. That’s when people who already wear glasses start to need lenses that help them see better at close range. At 50, it becomes all too evident that we need to hold our smartphones much further away in order to see clearly. In other words, the eye’s lens is no longer able to make out close-up objects clearly – this is what we call “accommodation” and is normally the time when glasses wearers need to switch to progressive lenses.
Why does this happen?
It’s a normal part of the aging process. The eye’s lens starts to lose its elasticity due to a range of physiological processes. The elasticity results in the eye’s lens becoming more spherical at an early age when looking at objects at close range. Loss of elasticity means an increase in the refractive power is no longer possible; this is also known as presbyopia. Some people say this depends on the ciliary muscle. The solution would be to train them and then you’ll be able to see nearby objects clearly, even as you get older. However, the muscles function is preserved with age and it’s actually due to the stiffening of the eye’s lens.