hi, hfivaz123 !
The yellow lines are elements of the iridial stroma. There is no
need to "correct" them. Of course, distinguished iridologists here
are entitled to - and indeed invited to express other opinions :-)
Please let me explain a bit the issue of iris color, especially in
low-pigment-and-fine-stromal-configurations like those in blue
eyes...
So here we are looking at the two epithelia and to the iris stroma.
Pigment (that's melanin, and this is only one variety for all eye
colors, different however from melanins in skin and hair) is found
mainly in the epithelia.
However, the stroma contains mobile pigment containers (melanosomes)
in _mobile_ cells (melanophores). This gives the stromal pigment
moiety a significant functional capacity. It is in fact this
compartment which is in charge for changes in local and overall iris
hues for substructures like contraction rings and "spikes" and stuff.
Amazingly, the melanophores achieve this only by aggregation and
other subtle movements which provide for different parameters in the
phenomena of light dispersion, selective reflection, diffusion and
diffraction which are in turn responsible for eye color. It's all
about - if you like such comparisons - a versatile "grid" in a stack
of fuzzy filters.
Now, to go back to the question of yellow "lines", you know,
lipofuscin (the wear and tear pigment) is ubiquitous in vivo.
Lipofuscin is _the_ exception to the one-pigment-gives-all-hues
rule. However, it only gives "green eyes" in select "combinations"
with melanin. I used the quotes here because no chemical reactions
occur between melanin and lipofuscin.
Hope this helps, and thank you for your interesting question.
--- In iridial_studies@yahoogroups.com, "hfivaz123" <hfivaz@...>
wrote:
>
> I would like to know.
> There are yellow lines in blue eyes.
> What would that represent and how does a person correct it??
>