17/10/2025
If a cataract is not treated, it will gradually worsen over time — and in severe cases, it can even cause permanent vision loss.
Here’s a clear and complete explanation 👇
⚠️ 1. Progressive Vision Decline
The lens becomes cloudier, making everything look blurry, hazy, or dim.
Reading, driving (especially at night), and recognizing faces become harder.
Colors start looking faded or yellowish.
Glare from sunlight or headlights becomes very uncomfortable.
🧠 You might feel like your glasses are “never strong enough,” but the real issue is inside the eye — not the lens power.
🌑 2. Functional Blindness
If untreated, cataracts can progress to the point where:
You can only see light and dark, but no details.
In advanced stages, the pupil may appear white or grayish.
It can lead to total vision loss in the affected eye.
Although cataracts themselves don’t directly damage the retina, the longer you delay treatment, the harder and riskier the surgery becomes because the lens becomes dense (“mature cataract”).
🧬 3. Secondary Complications
Chronic untreated cataracts can also cause:
Eye inflammation (phacolytic glaucoma) due to leakage of lens proteins
Increased eye pressure (glaucoma)
Retinal damage if the cataract blocks light and disturbs ocular metabolism
In rare severe cases, the eye may become painful and swollen — a medical emergency requiring urgent care.
💡 4. Quality of Life Impact
Untreated cataracts don’t just affect sight — they affect mental health and safety:
Increased risk of falls or accidents
Loss of independence (difficulty with mobility, reading, self-care)
Depression or isolation due to reduced vision
✅ Summary
Stage/ Effect/ Reversibility
Early:
-Blurred or cloudy vision.
-Reversible with surgery.
Moderate:
-Loss of color clarity, glare sensitivity
-Reversible with surgery
Severe:
-Functional blindness
-Reversible, but surgery more difficult
Complicated:
-Glaucoma, inflammation.
-May cause permanent vision loss