Effective and safe vision restoration — within one hour of Magotherapy!
What others call impossible — is possible for us!!!
Results within 1 hour of testing — no complications, no risk — stable results for over 20 years
Amblyopia is a complete or partial decrease in vision in one or both eyes that cannot be corrected with glasses or contact lenses.

A weak or very weak impulse travels from the poorly-seeing eye to the brain.
The brain cannot perceive this impulse, cannot process it, and cannot return a complete image to the eye. Therefore, the image becomes blurred and not sharp.
The eye that sees poorly no longer participates in the vision process and deviates sideways, which is why it is called a "lazy" eye.
The brain cannot make the image received from only one eye complete, therefore in strabismus, fusion ability or binocular vision is impaired.The brain cannot make the image received from only one eye complete, therefore in strabismus, fusion ability or binocular vision is impaired.
Fusion ability is needed to see the information received by both eyes completely and to clearly distinguish the details of objects in the visual field. In amblyopia, fusion ability is reduced, which causes great discomfort to the person.

Strabismus is the asymmetric position of the eye(s), when one or both eyes periodically deviate toward the nose, temple, upward or downward.
Anisometropia is a condition where the visual acuity and refractions of both eyes differ significantly from each other.
In various diseases (cataract, ptosis, corneal opacity, etc.), when light rays cannot reach the retina. Treatment of these disorders from an early age is necessary.

At an early age, children do not know and cannot realize that they see poorly. Reduced vision and related problems irritate the child and they become fussy, cry often, have reduced learning ability, which parents often attribute to the child's laziness, bad mood, or personality traits. Only parents, through simple observation, can detect a specific eye disease in a child at an early stage. Timely consultation with a doctor, especially when there is a hereditary factor, will spare you many problems in the future.
Squints eyes when examining objects.
Turns their face to the same side toward the sun.
Constantly tilts head to the same side when examining objects.
Frequently rubs eyes, scratches them.
Complains of headaches, especially in the evening.
Leans close while drawing or writing.
Has frequent tearing and eye redness.
Has difficulty adapting to darkness (falls in poor lighting).
One or both eyes periodically deviate.
Difficulties during learning.
Reduced vision leaves an indelible mark on the child's psyche and hinders their development.

Adults usually discover amblyopia accidentally, during a preventive or mandatory examination, when they periodically look through only one eye.
In amblyopia, no visible organic pathology is noted. The cause of vision impairment is functional disturbances of the visual analyzer, the restoration of which is quite problematic with existing methods.
The eye focuses the light image onto the retina.
On the retina, light impulses are converted into nerve impulses.
Nerve impulses travel through the optic nerves to the visual center of the brain, where they are processed, and as a result, the brain returns a complete image to the eye.


The nerve impulse cannot reach the visual center.
The brain cannot perceive the nerve impulse, accordingly cannot process it, and the image from the poorly-seeing eye becomes blurred.
During Magotherapy treatment, under the influence of special equipment placed on the skin, in 0.002 seconds, cells in the central part of the retina (macular zone) are removed from parabiotical state. Functional and structural restoration of retinal elements occurs, ensuring the transformation of light rays into nerve impulses.
Positive biochemical changes occurring in the cell cause, at the same speed, an increase in the membrane potential of nerve cells and activation of nerve impulses. As a result, the nerve impulse now reaches the brain — the visual center — and a sharp and clear image appears before the eye.
During the ten-day procedures, which are needed to consolidate the obtained result, the corresponding brain areas "learn" to respond to nerve impulses. This and many other factors determine not only vision restoration, but also the stability of the obtained result for more than 20 years.
Complete or partial vision restoration occurs.
With eye deviation (strabismus), the deviation angle decreases.
An eye operated several times also assumes a symmetrical position.
Results are stable for over 20 years.
Fusion ability or binocular vision approaches or becomes normal.
You can view patient results and experiences from Magotherapy treatment on our YouTube channel.