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Eye floaters, what do we know?
For about the last 30 minutes or so have been having trouble seeing.
Started in my peripheral and thought it was just reflections from my monitor on the edges of my rimless glasses. Slowly moved to cover most of my field of view. Not your typical type of floaters but more like retina burn from looking at small bright lights too long. Full spectrum of color like a rainbow. Very similar to when you close your eyelids and rub your eyeballs too hard. It's starting to subside but I'd say at its worst it occluded 20% or so of my vision. Also have an ever so slight buzzing headache. Do I need to call 911? |
YES I think so, do not eff around with these sort of symptoms
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Doesn't sound like a floater. Mine, left eye, looks like a cobweb.
Both eyes? |
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I hope you don't read this reply until you've already been to the eye specialist because you heeded the first three posts and got your sorry self out the door!
Best Les |
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I get something similar, but less serious than that once in a while. Like a shimmering thread floating somewhere in my field of vision. For me, it’s related to being dehydrated. A big glass of water and it’s soon gone.
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Its mostly cleared up but on the phone with Doc regardless.
Thanks |
Don't mess around with this. Go see an opthalmologist, or better yet a retina specialist, quickly. Hopefully it's nothing, but if it is something bad the earlier it's treated the better chance of saving your vision.
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You need to see a retina specialist ASAP! Could be the beginning of a detached retina or other serious condition. Don’t F around and get seen immediately. I know, I waited too long and my retina detached and my vision in one eye is totally FUd
Tell them it’s an emergency because the sooner it’s caught the less damage is done. |
Do you have a history of migraines?
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BUT, if it is the first time, you have to be checked by an ophtalomologist/ neurologist, or at the ER. |
Neil Young saw something in his eye, turned out to be an aneurysm.
https://ultimateclassicrock.com/neil-young-brain-aneurysm/ Dont eff around.... |
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I had a tear in the retina in my left eye a few years ago. I kept seeing flashes of light off to the side. Did a search on the symptoms and it said it healed itself 85% of the time. It did, but I was stupid not to see a doctor. I didn't have a headache, so I'd heed the advice of everybody else to go to the doctor. Good luck.
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SM, it sounds like an Ocular Migraine:
https://www.allaboutvision.com/conditions/ocular-migraine.htm I get those about 3-4 times a year. BUT, as others here have pointed out if this is your first time experiencing this, check with your Optometrist/Ophthalmologist to confirm that it's not the onset of a retinal detachment which is obviously very serious. Mine typically last about 15-20 minutes and they are kinda FREAKY! But they do go away. Cheers! |
It's an ocular migraine... I have those 1-6 times a year... Nothing you can do... According to my boss, sure beats having those over his "regular" migraines... Those don't give me a headache, I just can't read right for 15-20 minutes, very freaky the first time - welcome to the club.
Did it look anything like this ? (mine are a mirror image of that). Generally it's one eye only. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1553806794.png Now real floaters, I have those too. I now have one that's really annoying the crap out of me near the center of my eye, somedays I can get it to float away, some not, and there is nothing (appealing) you can do about those... Different deal. |
Ocular migraine with aura. No pain, just geometric shapes. Had a few over the years. Flashing lights, mirror balls, just don't look at things you know might start it going. If you start talking funny, could be a TIA.
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Ocular Migraine is the initial diagnosis according to my Doc.
And yeah, it looked like that. |
Freaky huh ? Well now you know... If you or John Walker have any clue as to what triggers them, I'm all ears... To me it's invariably been after staring at a computer screen - but I do that everyday and I don't get them more than a few times a year normally...
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Ocular migraine. I have had it too before, many times.
Had it checked out by an eye doc. As long as it is temporary and without headache, it is pretty harmles. It covers half of my vision sometimes, so not handy while driving... |
I've had something similar happen. Turns out, all I needed was a glass of water.
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Learn to avoid staring at bright flashing lights, bright flickering things like mirror balls, flickering sunlight as you're driving past rows or trees of the like. I was in a bakery waiting for my coffee drink and happened to stare too long at the rotating pastry display which had a center column covered in little mirrored pieces, like a mirror ball, and I could feel it coming on.
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An ocular or retinal migraine originates in the eye, so it will only affect the vision in one eye... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retinal_migraine A visual migraine, or scintillating scotoma, can produce the same visual aura but originates in the occipital cortex of the brain, and will affect the vision in both eyes. This is actually more common... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scintillating_scotoma |
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Yup, ocular migraine. I have had the 4 times. Blood vessel constriction. They resolve in about 20 min.
Weird experience however. Like looking thru shiny broken glass. |
It sounds like you may have found the issue, but this is another possibility (albeit, more common in older folks), vitreous detachment.
https://nei.nih.gov/health/vitreous/vitreous |
A number of years ago , driving to Virginia to attend my son's HS graduation, I discovered I could not see peripherally out of my right eye. When I return back to Chicago (home) I went to my eye doctor. I had a torn retina. You don't take these lightly because you can go blind. I went to a retina specialist and was operated on the next day. That was about 6 years ago. I get an annual check-up ever since.
I have had floaters too. My eyesight is a weak link for me. I'm glad you didn't ignore the symptoms. |
I've had one similar episode sitting in front of a computer screen about 5 years ago that freaked me out. Went to the optometrist as soon as I could get to see him that day. Of course the symptoms had gone by then, but it was scary.
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I get them from time to time, and they suck for sure, but they do pass. I remember actually being somewhat relieved when I found out they were a sort of migraine, rather than something possibly more serious.
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I'd be more than willing to trade my age related eye problems for ocular migraines.
Age related Macular degeneration, glaucoma, and cataracts...all mostly in the left eye. Treated currently with a series of shots in the eyeball for the macular degeneration, drops for the glaucoma, and cataracts not big enough yet to call for lens replacement surgery. Still, all treatable...so thankful that medical science has advanced far enough for that. Pisses me off tho...if anybody here is a pool player, you know how you just know whether a shot is a hit or a miss the moment the cue ball leaves the tip? Yeah, well...I can make a shot, knowing it's in...only to see I'm 1/2 diamond off. My pool game is in the tank. :( |
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Maybe dial back the caffeine. I have heard of ocular migraines but never knew what the symptoms are. Saw a patient a few weeks ago said they took low dose aspirin for it, which makes a lot more sense now.
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On the subject of eye floaters: I get small ones every couple of years. First time I noticed one I had woken in the middle of the night to take a leak. I'm standing over the toilet and out of the corner of my eye I swore I saw bug on the floor move. It startled me. I look down and nothing was there. A second later its drifting across my eye. Hydration is important for eye health. When the fluid inside the eyeball lowers all sorts of weird stuff can happen. Eyes get blurry, sticky, ocular pressure changes to compensate for fluid loss, radical vision changes. |
Don't know how old you are.
It's good to get eye changes checked out. However, be prepared for dry eye, and all kinds of bizarre symptoms as you age. Dry eye can cause sparkly, crackles around the perimeter of the field of vision, along with a bunch of other issues. Then add in the floaters. I have a big one that looks like an amoeba. He comes around once in a while in my left eye. Hitting my head didn't help as it loosened up a bunch on that same eye too. You may have to invest in expensive eye drops, like Refresh Optive, or other higher quality drops... |
Getting treatment for retinopathy. That is where the blood vessels in the retina swell and leak. Where there is a leak the blood causes floaters. They are actually blood that blocks the light getting to your retina. At first the floaters were just little spots that looked like flies were in my vision. Had a vitrectomy where they remove the vitreous fluid next to the retina that has the blood in it and the vitreous fluid (or membrane) grows back.
At first the floaters would appear and look like spots with webs . Then after several minutes would explode, or dissipate into thousands of tiny tiny dots. putting a slight haze on my vision. Then seemed to disappear. Then as the bleeding got worse after I got up started to get a dark flow that would slowly move up across my vision. If I kept my head up it would move to the top of my vision (which is actually the bottom of your eye). After this I got the secon vitrectomy on that eye. All this time I get monthly shots in each eye that helps to toughen and reduce the swelling of the blood vessels. The problem with the leaking besides the floaters is everywhere there is a leak new blood vesslels form. This blocks the visual cones reducing the resolution of your vision. Kinda like going from 1080 to 720 to just HD, then to SD, etc. To help stop the the places that start bleeding are hit with a laser to cauterize them. I've had over 3000 spots lasered on each retina. After 5 they have to stop a second of your eye gets unbearably hot. The extra benefit is it is like spot welding my retina to the back of my eye so I never have to worry about detached retina. The floaters also promote cataract growth. So, in the last 5 years I've had, Shot in each eye every month. 2 vitrectomy surgeries in each eye. over 3000 spots tasered in each eye, and cataract surgery in each eye and treatment to laser the scar tissue from the back of the new lenses.The good news is I am 20/25 now and only have to get checked for the shots every 6 months. Still have a few light floaters in my right eye, and a floater in my left eye that looks like an ameba, it is a chunk of scar tissue from the back of the cataract lens. |
Maybe the ocular migraine is what I get several times a year. It’s like too much light is getting in and there are sparkles going off.
The bad thing I get every so often is double vision. It’s like something clicks and it’s double vision. I’ve had to close an eye for a short period to see. Laying down with my eyes closed helps it to go away. Eye doc had no explanation. |
Holloway has a good eye surgeon if you need one.
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Reviving this one - Any common triggers / cures for ocular migraines ?
I used to get those 3-4 times a year in my 30s, now (50) it's more like 2-3 times a month. Age ? Eye-doc says all good, regular doc says harmless, but the increase in frequency is annoying... I'm starting to fear a career staring at a monitor is gonna come to an end ! they're generally only 10-15 minutes long with no pain but freaky.. |
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