Colour vision deficiency
Colour blindness
مراجعة من قبل الدكتور كولين تايدي، MRCGPآخر تحديث بواسطة Dr Hayley Willacy, FRCGP Last updated 5 مارس 2025
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Colour vision deficiency, also called colour blindness, is when you are unable to see certain colours. The most common form of the condition is red-green colour vision deficiency.
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نقاط رئيسية
Colour vision deficiency (colour blindness) means you find it hard to tell certain colours apart, most often reds, greens, and sometimes blues.
It’s usually inherited and present from birth, though it can also develop later due to eye disease, ageing, or certain medications.
There’s no cure, but most people adapt well by using special colour filters, tinted lenses, or apps that can help distinguish colours more easily.
Colour vision deficiency can be diagnosed from an eye test called the Ishihara test.
تابع القراءة أدناه
What is colour vision deficiency?
Colour vision deficiency, or colour blindness, is when you have difficulty seeing or telling the difference between certain colours.
There are different types of colour vision deficiency. For example, you may be unable to tell red from green or blue from yellow. Red-green colour blindness is by far the most common form.
The effects of colour vision deficiency can be variable - from mild to severe. Some people with colour vision deficiency don't even know they've got it. Others may have a lot of difficulty and be unable to work in certain jobs.
How do we see colour?
العودة إلى المحتوياتDifferent colours are seen by special cells in the retina at the back of your eye. There are two types of cells, called rods and cones. Cones are concerned with colour vision. There are three types of cones: red cones, blue cones and green cones.
Side view of the structure of the eye

Each type of cone senses a different range of light. Therefore the combination of light sensed by the different cones allows you to know the colour you are looking at. For example, stimulation of green and red cones makes you see green. If all three types of cone are stimulated then you see white.
If you don't have any of the three types of cone then you will only be able to see black, white and shades of grey. But this severe form of colour blindness is very rare.
تابع القراءة أدناه
What are the causes of colour vision deficiency?
العودة إلى المحتوياتFor most people with colour vision deficiency the cause is inherited (genetic) and the special code inside each cell in your body (the gene) is passed on from your parents. The most common type - red-green colour blindness - is caused by an abnormal gene on the X chromosome and is much more common in males.
Much more rarely colour vision deficiency can develop later in life as a result of conditions such as:
DNA, genes and chromosomes
In most cells of your body you have 46 chromosomes arranged in 23 pairs. 22 of the pairs are matching pairs. The 23rd pair of chromosomes are the sex chromosomes, which match exactly in women (who have two X chromosomes) but not in men - who have one X and one Y.
One chromosome from each pair comes from your mother and one from your father. Chromosomes are made of DNA, which stands for 'deoxyribonucleic acid'. This is your genetic material. It is found in the nucleus of every cell in your body.
Each of your 46 chromosomes carries hundreds of genes. A gene is the basic unit of your genetic material. It is made up of a piece (a sequence) of DNA and sits at a particular place on a chromosome. So, a gene is a small section of a chromosome.
A gene is effectively a coded set of instructions to the cells. Each gene has a particular function in your body. For example, a gene may be involved in dictating your eye colour or determining your height. Each gene has a matching 'paired' gene on the paired chromosome. So, as for chromosomes, one gene from each pair is inherited from your mother, the other from your father. Humans have between 20,000 and 25,000 genes.
How is colour vision deficiency diagnosed?
العودة إلى المحتوياتColour vision deficiency is usually first diagnosed using special coloured pictures called Ishihara plates. The Ishihara plate has 16 different diagrams made up of dots to show a number. The Ishihara plate below is used to assess red-green colour vision. People with red-green colour vision deficiency will not be able to see the number clearly.
Ishahara plate

© Sakurambo, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
(For more information see the link to 'Online colour vision tests' in Further reading below).
تابع القراءة أدناه
Can colour vision deficiency be treated?
العودة إلى المحتوياتThere is no treatment that can correct or prevent inherited (genetic) colour vision deficiencies.
Colour blindness may be caused by an underlying condition such as thyroid disease or diabetes. The colour vision deficiency may improve with treatment for the underlying condition.
How common is colour vision deficiency?
العودة إلى المحتوياتColour blindness affects about 1 in 12 men and 1 in 200 women. It is much more common in men because the most common form (red-green colour vision deficiency) is passed on in a gene on the X chromosome (see below for further explanation).
What problems can colour vision deficiency cause?
العودة إلى المحتوياتNearly all people with colour blindness can see things as clearly as other people but they cannot see certain colours clearly. If you have red-green colour vision deficiency you will not be able to clearly see any colour which has some red or green as part of the whole colour. For example, you will confuse blue and purple (because red and blue make purple).
The effects of colour blindness can be variable, ranging from mild to severe. Some people with colour vision deficiency are unaware that they've got it.
Colour vision deficiency need not prevent someone from driving. Traffic lights can be distinguished by the position of the light.
Colour vision deficiency may cause difficulty at school. Colour vision deficiency can also affect the choice of certain jobs and careers. The list of careers that may not be possible for a person with colour vision deficiency includes:
Certain grades within the armed forces.
Civil aviation: pilots, engineers, technical and maintenance staff, air traffic controllers.
Customs and excise officers.
Railways: drivers, engineers and maintenance staff.
Fire service officers.
Hospital laboratory technicians and pharmacists.
Workers in paint, paper and textile manufacture, photography and fine art reproduction.
However, the restrictions vary. For example, Australian airlines do now allow people with colour vision deficiency to be pilots.
الأسئلة الشائعة
العودة إلى المحتوياتIs colour vision deficiency a disability?
Colour vision deficiency is not usually classed as a disability in the UK, but it can affect certain jobs or activities that rely on accurate colour recognition. Most people with colour blindness can adapt well and live normal daily lives
How do you know if you are colour blind?
You might be colour blind if you struggle to tell certain colours apart, such as reds and greens or blues and yellows. The most reliable way to know is through a colour vision test, like the Ishihara test, which can confirm the type and severity of colour blindness.
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صحة العين
Hypermetropia
The medical name for long-sightedness is hypermetropia, sometimes called hyperopia. Eyesight problems, such as hypermetropia, are also known as refractive errors. Long-sightedness leads to problems with near vision (seeing things that are close up) and the eyes may commonly become tired. Distance vision (long sight) is, in the beginning, good. Long sight can be corrected by glasses, contact lenses, or laser eye surgery.
بقلم الدكتور كولين تايدي، MRCGP

صحة العين
Eye floaters, flashes and haloes
Eye floaters and flashes are common and are usually nothing to worry about. They usually occur because of normal changes that happen in the jelly-like substance inside the eye (vitreous humour) as you age. Haloes are bright circles around a source of light. They are also referred to as glare. They are a common symptom, particularly in older people. They can sometimes be a sign of underlying eye conditions such as glaucoma.
بقلم الدكتورة فيليبا فينسنت، MRCGP
قراءة إضافية ومراجع
- Simunovic MP; Colour vision deficiency. Eye (Lond). 2010 May;24(5):747-55. doi: 10.1038/eye.2009.251. Epub 2009 Nov 20.
- Online colour vision tests
- Pasmanter N, Munakomi S; Physiology, Color Perception.
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الدكتور كولين تايدي، MRCGP

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