Danger associated with the use of smartphones in the dark.
Warning: Looking at your
smartphone while lying in bed at night could wreak havoc on your vision.
Two women went temporarily
blind from constantly checking their phones in the dark, say doctors who are
now alerting others to the unusual phenomenon.
The solution: Make sure to
use both eyes when looking at your smartphone screen in the dark.
In Thursday's New England
Journal of Medicine, doctors detailed
the cases of the two women, ages 22 and 40, who experienced "transient
smartphone blindness" for months.
The women complained of
recurring episodes of temporary vision loss for up to 15 minutes. They were
subjected to variety of medical exams, MRI scans and heart tests. Yet doctors
couldn't find anything wrong with them to explain the problem.
But minutes after walking
into an eye specialist's office, the mystery was solved.
"I simply asked them,
'What exactly were you doing when this happened?'" recalled Dr. Gordon
Plant of Moorfield's Eye Hospital in London.
He explained that both
women typically looked at their smartphones with only one eye while resting on
their side in bed in the dark - their other eye was covered by the pillow.
"So you have one eye
adapted to the light because it's looking at the phone and the other eye is
adapted to the dark," he said.
When they put their phone
down, they couldn't see with the phone eye. That's because "it's taking
many minutes to catch up to the other eye that's adapted to the dark,"
Plant said.
He said the temporary
blindness was ultimately harmless, and easily avoidable, if people stuck to
looking at their smartphones with both eyes.
One of the women was
relieved the short-term blindness didn't signal a more serious problem like an
imminent stroke. He said the second woman was more skeptical and kept a
rigorous monthslong diary tracking her fleeting vision loss before she finally
believed him. But she couldn't stop checking her phone for messages from bed,
he said.
Dr. Rahul Khurana, a
spokesman for the American Academy of Ophthalmology, called it a fascinating
hypothesis but said two cases weren't enough to prove that one-eyed smartphone
use in the dark caused the problem. He also doubted whether many smartphone
users would experience the phenomenon.
Khurana, who acknowledged
that he's an avid cellphone user, said that he and his wife tried to recreate
the scenario on a recent evening, but had difficulty checking their phones with
only one eye. "It was very odd," he said.
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