Strabismus

Strabismus sometimes occurs due to relaxation of certain muscles that move the eyeball, and the eye deviates in the opposite direction from the relaxed muscle. Sometimes it occurs from moisture, sometimes from dryness, as, for example, in acute diseases. Strabismus from muscle spasm occurs from spasm of the moving muscle. It is this spasm that causes strabismus and suffering. As for the spasm of the muscle at the root of the eye socket, which pulls the eye back, it does not cause strabismus and is even very useful. Strabismus often occurs after brain diseases such as epilepsy, inflammation of the meninges, dizziness, and the like due to burning, dryness and congestion. Know that the deviation of the eye upward or downward is the reason that it sees one object twice. Lateral deviation does not cause significant harm to vision.

Treatment. Congenital strabismus cannot be treated, unless at the age of very wet childhood. Sometimes there is hope for a cure, especially if the suffering is recent. To do this, you need to place the cradle straight and place the lamp on the opposite side, where the oblique eye is directed, so that vision is directed towards the lamp all the time. You also need to hang some red object on a thread and place it in the direction opposite to the squinting eye. Or put some red object to the opposite temple or ear. All this should be done in such a way that the child’s vision is directed to these objects with some effort, for this effort is useful in straightening the eye and directing the blood to what straightens the gaze. Those people whose strabismus has occurred when they have already become adults and old people and whose cause is senility or wet convulsions, should resort to cleansing the brain with emptying agents, which I called large iyarajas, and the like. In this case, you need to soften the regime and take a resolving bath.

Remedies useful for strabismus include injecting squeezed juice of olive leaves into the nose. If strabismus occurs from spasm due to dryness, then moisturizing douches should be given. If there is no fever, then let the patient drink donkey milk with moisturizers. In general, all activities should be moisturizing. Dove blood should be dripped into the eye and a medicinal bandage should be applied with egg white, rose oil and a small amount of wine; everyone does this within a few days.