From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishastigmatismas‧tig‧ma‧tis‧m /əˈstɪɡmətɪzəm/ noun [uncountable] MIdifficulty in seeing clearly that is caused by a change in the inner shape of the eye
Examples from the Corpus
astigmatism• Despite what has been called the moral astigmatism of the Tuskegee study, not all of its lessons are negative.• His views on the nature of astigmatism were important and he improved the treatment of acute glaucoma.• Similarly, the variation of distance refraction and the presence of astigmatism is also lower than for humans.• He said developments are expected within a year which will not only enable severe astigmatism to be corrected but also long-sightedness.Origin astigmatism (1800-1900) A-2 + Greek stigma “mark, point”; because there is no point at which light focuses