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What is keratoconus
Keratoconus affects the structure and strength of the cornea, which is the clear front window of the eye. When the cornea loses its regular shape, it cannot focus light sharply onto the retina, which is what creates distortion.
How keratoconus changes the cornea
With keratoconus, the cornea thins and becomes uneven, leading to irregular astigmatism. Instead of light focusing neatly at one point, it spreads across multiple points, causing blur, ghosting, and a sense that your vision is never quite crisp even with a current prescription.
Keratoconus vs astigmatism
Regular astigmatism is very common and usually corrects well with glasses or standard contact lenses. Keratoconus causes irregular astigmatism, where the cornea is not simply shaped a bit unevenly, but becomes distorted and unstable over time. This is why people with keratoconus often need specialty contact lenses or corneal treatment rather than routine correction alone.
When keratoconus usually starts
Keratoconus often begins in the teenage years or early adulthood, but it can also be diagnosed later. Sometimes it is picked up when prescriptions start changing faster than expected, or when corneal mapping is performed for contact lens fitting or laser eye surgery screening.
Blurred or distorted vision
Frequent prescription changes
Light sensitivity and night vision problems
Keratoconus does not have one single cause, but there are known risk factors and associations that can increase likelihood and progression.
Risk is higher if a close relative has keratoconus. Family history does not guarantee you will develop it, but it can be a reason to screen earlier, especially if vision changes quickly or astigmatism increases.
There is a strong association between frequent eye rubbing and keratoconus progression. Allergies that cause itchy eyes can increase rubbing, so managing triggers can support comfort and reduce the urge to rub.
Keratoconus is more common in people with atopy, such as eczema, asthma, and hay fever. The link is likely related to inflammation, eye rubbing, and tissue response, rather than being caused by one specific condition.
Keratoconus varies a lot from person to person. Some cases remain mild and stable, while others progress and need active treatment. The stage helps guide correction options and monitoring frequency
In early keratoconus, corneal irregularity may be mild and vision may still correct reasonably well with glasses. Subtle irregular astigmatism can still cause ghosting or night glare even when the prescription looks small.
As keratoconus progresses, corneal shape changes become more obvious and irregular astigmatism increases. Vision can fluctuate, prescriptions may change frequently, and standard correction becomes less reliable.
Advanced keratoconus can cause significant distortion, higher dependence on contact lenses, and an increased risk of corneal scarring. When scarring or severe irregularity limits vision despite specialty lenses, surgical options may be discussed.
Corneal tomography
Corneal tomography maps corneal curvature and detects early keratoconus changes. These scans identify steepening, asymmetry, and irregularity that glasses prescriptions alone cannot fully explain.
Corneal thickness measurements
Refraction and vision testing
Monitoring for progression
Specialty contact lenses often provide the best vision because they create a smoother optical surface over the irregular cornea. Options include rigid gas permeable lenses, hybrid designs, and scleral lenses, which vault over the cornea and can be more comfortable for many people while giving strong visual quality.
Cross linking is designed to strengthen the cornea and slow or stop progression. It does not reverse keratoconus, but it can help preserve your current corneal shape and reduce the chance of needing more invasive surgery later. If you are considering this treatment, our corneal cross linking page explains how it works and what recovery can involve.
A corneal transplant may be considered when scarring, severe thinning, or extreme irregularity limits vision despite contact lenses. This is generally reserved for advanced cases and is discussed carefully with expected recovery and long term monitoring.
Cross linking is one of the most important treatments because it targets progression rather than just correcting vision.
The main goal of cross linking is stabilisation. Vision does not usually become instantly perfect, and you may still need glasses or contact lenses afterwards. Some people notice gradual visual improvement as the cornea stabilises, but results vary and should be discussed in a realistic way.
Rediscover clearer vision
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