I'm in my late forties and my eyesight has been deteriorating for close work and reading to the point where I needed glasses to read GAW on my 24 inch screen and I was holding my flip phone at nearly arm's length to read texts. I do have glasses of about 2.5 diopters but I find that my depth of field is gone so that I have to keep taking them off to attend to my son who needs constant supervision. I also have a bit of astigmatism so when out of focus, text is doubled and offset diagonally in both eyes.
I was researching LASIK eye surgery to try to fix the problem, at least the astigmatism part, but I can't afford to be out of action. Anyway, the problem is the flexibility of the lens reducing with age so corneal surgery doesn't really help with the loss of focal accomodation. Surgical replacement eye lenses, usually a cataract treatrment, might do the trick, but I feel too young for that and again, I can't be out of action due to my caring responsibilities.
After a little background reading, I found that presbyopia is caused by age related stiffening of the lens caused by chemical crosslinking between the long chain molecules in the lens. The crosslinking is -S-S- bonds, which are sulphur linkages, but may be thought of as oxidative damage for the purposes of treatment.
My medical experiment No.1 which I posted on on GAW was taking nattokinase, a clotbuster and fibrinolytic drug, which helps the body break down clots and scar tissue. I take nattokinase so that I can, in good conscience, mention it to vaxxed people at risk of blood clots. *Please note, there are contraindications to taking the supplement nattokinase such as interactions with other drugs and supplements and increased risk of uncontrolled bleeding. This paragraph does not constitute medical advice and is for curiosity value only.
Here's the post: https://greatawakening.win/p/142AwMNxDv/im-taking-the-clotbuster-supplem/
I reasoned that it might help with stiffening of the lens as it does with other tissues, but it doesn't seem to do this so I searched for an oral supplement which might reverse the stiffening and I found that there had been medical trials of eye drops to reverse the stiffening and the trials had gone well with no ill effects. The eye drops contained unspecified amounts of lipoic acid, an antioxidant which is the main active ingredient and choline, the purpose of which in the drops isn't known to me,
Here's an example:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33514891/
Anyway, you can get lipoic acid (600mg of nature identical alpha lipoic acid in oral capsules) as an antioxidant and health and beauty supplement.
I ordered some and dissolved a tiny bit of the white powder in the capsules in hot water and applied it as warm solution in a tissue to my left eye, letting the eyelid open a bit. It was not uncomfortable and did not seem to have an immediate effect of any kind. I continued this for a few days and imagined that I might be seeing a bit better with that eye. Rather ruining a controlled experiment, I started applying more and more powder as stronger solution to both eyes. When you dissolve half a capsule in a little cold water, it makes a strong milky liquid and at his concentration it stings a little and if you apply it at night, your eye is a bit gummed up in the morning due to the minor irritation.
I have a fine print copy of "How the mind works" by Steven Pinker and I absolutely couldn't read it in any way without glasses before I started my eye treatment. Now I can read it unaided in good light, and I hardly wear my glasses, I'm not wearing them now. The improvement could be coincidental for some reason, or it could be some kind of mind-over-body placebo effect, but the improvement is there.
I'm very happy with my experiment so far. Is this interesting? Any questions?
Important edit after something that came up inthe comments:
I don't think this will work for myopia, although maybe I'm wrong. The myopic lens is too rounded already and the muscles squish the lens to focus I think. This treatment might make myopia worse by making the lens more pliable and rounder due to the resting muscle tension.
I expect this treatment is irreversible so please don't try it for myopia.
Hello, hope you're still around and I can get some advice:
I got my hands on some Alpha Lipoic Acid but when I mixed it with cold or hot water, it just came out as a sticky glue like substance, and not as what you describe as a watery milky compound. I've no idea why although I'm concluding my acid is very different from yours or that I'm preparing incorrectly.
I got this:
https://files.catbox.moe/0i7jke.jpg
https://files.catbox.moe/knn5k5.jpg
I think this one is yours:
https://files.catbox.moe/e7yg8a.jpg
If it's the ingrediants then do you know the specific ingrediant which is causing the making of the goo substance, so that I can find some lipoc acid without that ingrediant?
Sorry, I know it might be a stretch to ask you but I thought I might ask. Thank you for your time.
Mine are "The Body & skin Clinic" It has written on it
"Alpha Lipoic Acid 600mg Veggie capsules"
and
"Ingredients: Pure Alpha Lipoic Acid no fillers or added artificial ingredients."
You can pull the capsules apart and tip out the white powder in them. When you mix it with a few millilitres of cold water it will make a milky liquid, I think if you use insufficient water you get a white paste which is not particularly gloopy. If you get some of the liquid you have made on your clothes, it precipitates out as it dries and makes washable white marks.
Perhaps the gelatin in yours is causing your issue or the silica gel.
"Perhaps the gelatin in yours is causing your issue or the silica gel."
ππ» Right, what I'm getting is not a white power from the capsules, kind of like very very small yellow pellets. So when I try and melt it with cold water, nothing happens, and when I use hot water then I get a soft toffee consistancy.
I'll try and find another lipoic acid without the gelatin and silica gel and experiement.
How's your eye sight now, improved? If so, have you done anything different?
Both eyes are OK, both have improved a bit. I haven't applied the lipoic acid to them for a couple of weeks but the improvement has stayed. I have much less eye strain and I'm not using glasses for my computer screen like I was before. I still need glasses for very fine print such as you find on ingredients lists on small packets of food.
I'll do another course of treatment soon.