Eye Emergency: When to Seek Immediate Eye Care

Sudden vision loss, a chemical in your eye, or a severe injury need emergency care right now. Many other eye symptoms, a red eye, mild irritation, a floater, can wait hours or days. Knowing the difference protects your sight and saves you unnecessary panic. Dr Shibal Bhartiya explains in this Eye Emergency Guide

📞 Call Dr Bhartiya: +91 88826 38735

Dr Shibal Bhartiya is a fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research CoDr Shibal Bhartiya is a fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator with over 25 years of experience. Her approach focuses on identifying risk before damage is irreversible, simplifying treatment decisions, and protecting vision long-term. Emphasis on early detection, risk assessment, and continuity of care. She is rated 5 stars across 1,500+ patient reviews on Google.

She sees patients who have waited too long, and patients who rushed to emergency rooms for something minor. This guide helps you act at the right moment.

🔴 Call Now — These Are True Eye Emergencies

The following symptoms require immediate emergency care. Do not wait for morning. Do not drive yourself if your vision is severely affected.

⚠ Go to Emergency or Call Right Now

  • Sudden loss of vision in one or both eyes — even if it lasts only a few minutes
  • Chemical splash in the eye — acid, alkali, cleaning fluid, bleach, or any unknown substance
  • Penetrating eye injury — a sharp object piercing the eye
  • Sudden severe eye pain with nausea and vomiting (acute angle-closure glaucoma)
  • A curtain, shadow, or dark veil across your vision — retinal detachment until proven otherwise
  • Sudden appearance of many new floaters plus flashing lights
  • Double vision that begins suddenly, especially with headache or facial numbness
  • Eye injury with visible blood inside the eye (hyphema)
  • Eyeball that looks misshapen or sunken after trauma
  • Loss of vision following head trauma

Why sudden vision loss is never “wait and see”

Vision loss can signal a retinal artery occlusion, essentially a stroke in the eye. The treatment window is extremely narrow. Every minute of delay increases permanent damage. If your vision disappears and returns within minutes, that is called a transient ischaemic attack of the eye. It is a warning sign. Seek care the same day.

Chemical injuries: the first 20 minutes matter most

Flush your eye immediately with clean water: tap water, bottled water, saline. Hold your eye open under running water for at least 15 to 20 minutes. Do not stop to find eye drops first. Do not rub. Flush first, then go to emergency. Alkali burns (bleach, cement, oven cleaner) are more dangerous than acid burns because they penetrate deeper and faster.

🟡 See a Doctor Today — Urgent but Not Emergency-Room Urgent

These symptoms are serious. They can deteriorate quickly. Arrange to be seen within hours, not days.

⌛ Same-Day Appointment Needed

  • Eye redness with significant pain and light sensitivity — could be uveitis or corneal ulcer
  • A sudden large floater with or without flashing lights
  • Blurred or hazy vision that developed today
  • A foreign body you cannot remove — metal, glass, or wood fragment
  • Contact lens stuck in your eye with pain or redness
  • Eyelid swollen, red, and painful — possibly cellulitis or severe stye
  • Eye discharge with severe redness in a newborn
  • Eye pain in a child with redness and fever
  • Painful red eye in a patient with glaucoma

The painful red eye with light sensitivity rule

A red eye that is painful and makes you squint in bright light is not conjunctivitis. Conjunctivitis does not usually hurt. A painful photosensitive red eye needs a slit-lamp examination to rule out corneal ulcer, uveitis, or acute glaucoma. Do not put over-the-counter drops in and hope it improves. Call your doctor.

🟢 Monitor at Home — These Can Usually Wait

These symptoms are common and rarely sight-threatening. They deserve attention but not panic. Book an appointment within a few days or at your next available slot.

📅 Schedule Within a Few Days

  • Mild redness with watery or sticky discharge — likely viral or bacterial conjunctivitis
  • A single small floater that has been stable for weeks
  • Gritty, sandy, or dry feeling in the eye — dry eye disease
  • Mild eyelid swelling or a painless lump — chalazion or stye
  • Itchy eyes with watering — allergic conjunctivitis
  • Gradual blurring of vision that has been worsening for weeks or months
  • Mild redness after swimming
  • Eye strain or headache after screen use

Quick Reference: Symptom, Likely Cause, Action Needed

SymptomLikely CauseWhen to WorryAction
Sudden vision lossRetinal artery occlusion, detachmentAlwaysEmergency
Chemical in eyeAlkali or acid burnAlwaysFlush + Emergency
Curtain across visionRetinal detachmentAlwaysEmergency
Severe pain + nauseaAcute angle-closure glaucomaAlwaysEmergency
Many new floaters + flashesPosterior vitreous detachment / tearYesEmergency
Sudden double visionCranial nerve palsy, TIAYes — especially with headacheEmergency
Painful red eye + photophobiaUveitis, corneal ulcerYesSame Day
One sudden large floaterPVD, possible tearYesSame Day
Blurred vision todayMultiple — needs assessmentYesSame Day
Foreign body stuckMetal, glass, woodYesSame Day
Swollen painful eyelidCellulitis, severe styeYes if fever or eye cannot openSame Day
Mild red watery eyeConjunctivitis (viral/allergic)Only if worseningWait + Monitor
Stable single floaterAge-related vitreous changeOnly if new or multiplyingRoutine Appointment
Dry, gritty eyeDry eye diseaseNo, unless painfulRoutine Appointment
Itchy eyes + wateringAllergic conjunctivitisNoRoutine Appointment
Gradual vision blur (weeks)Glasses change, cataractNoRoutine Appointment

Small Things That Are Actually Dangerous

Patients often dismiss these because they seem minor. They are not.

A Quiet Painless Red Spot

A bright red patch on the white of the eye after coughing or straining is usually a subconjunctival haemorrhage, harmless. But a red eye after a blow to the head or a red eye in someone taking blood thinners needs assessment that same day.

Brief Vision Loss (Seconds to Minutes)

Vision that goes dark or grey for a few seconds and returns feels trivial. It is not. This is called amaurosis fugax — a transient ischaemic attack of the eye. It is a stroke warning. Seek urgent medical care the same day.

Flashes of Light

Brief flashes, especially in a dark room, can signal retinal traction or a tear. A flash of light with a new shower of floaters is a retinal emergency. Do not wait to see if it settles.

Contact Lens Pain

Any pain while wearing a contact lens is the lens telling you to come out. Ignoring contact lens pain for hours risks Acanthamoeba keratitis, a serious corneal infection that can threaten vision permanently.

Headache Behind One Eye

A headache localised behind or around one eye, especially with a slightly droopy lid or a dilated pupil, can sometimes signal a posterior communicating artery aneurysm. This is a neurological emergency. Seek care immediately.

Eye Redness in a Glaucoma Patient

If you have glaucoma and your eye turns red with any pain or blurring, call your specialist the same day. A painful red eye in a glaucoma patient can mean acute angle closure, a vision-threatening emergency.

What We Often Miss — and Patients Dismiss

Missed Emergency #1

Vision loss in one eye dismissed as a migraine. Migraine aura affects both eyes. Sudden vision loss in only one eye is not a migraine. It is a vascular occlusion or detachment until proven otherwise.

Missed Emergency #2

Floaters in a young myopic patient ignored. Young patients with high myopia are at elevated risk for retinal tears. A new floater in this group needs dilated fundus examination, not reassurance.

Missed Emergency #3

Acute glaucoma treated as a migraine or food poisoning. Nausea, vomiting, and headache with a red eye and blurred vision is acute angle-closure glaucoma, not gastroenteritis. Many patients are given antiemetics at a general clinic and sent home. Vision can be permanently lost within hours.

Missed Emergency #4

Chemical injury undertreated because “it was just a splash.” Even a brief contact with a strong alkali can cause permanent corneal opacification. The volume matters less than the substance. Always irrigate and always seek care.

Missed Emergency #5

Eyelid infections assumed to be cosmetic. A painful, red, warm swelling of the eyelid that causes fever or restricts eye movement is orbital cellulitis, a medical emergency. It is not a stye that will go away on its own.

Eye Emergencies in Children: A Special Note

Children cannot always describe what they feel. Trust behaviour over words. A child rubbing one eye constantly, avoiding light, keeping an eye closed, or losing interest in activities because of what appears to be a sore eye needs to be seen promptly.

⚠ In Children: Seek Care That Day

  • Any eye injury — even if the child says it doesn’t hurt
  • Red eye in a newborn or infant with discharge
  • A child who suddenly develops a squint or whose eye turns inward or outward
  • A white or yellowish reflection in the pupil in a photograph (leukocoria)
  • Drooping of one eyelid in a child — especially new onset

Frequently Asked Questions

My eye is red but it doesn’t hurt. Should I be worried?

A painless red eye is usually conjunctivitis: viral, bacterial, or allergic. It is not an emergency. Monitor it for 24 to 48 hours. If it worsens, develops pain, affects vision, or is accompanied by photophobia, see a doctor the same day. A red eye that follows trauma is different, that needs assessment regardless of pain.

I see a new floater. Is this an emergency?

A single new floater, especially in someone over 50, is often a posterior vitreous detachment, a common ageing change. It is not dangerous on its own. But if it is accompanied by flashing lights, a shower of new floaters, or a shadow in your peripheral vision, treat it as an emergency. Get a dilated examination that day. Retinal tears caught early are treatable with laser. Missed tears become detachments.

Can I use over-the-counter eye drops for a red eye?

rLubricating drops are safe for dry or irritated eyes. Avoid redness-reducing drops (those containing vasoconstrictors) as a habit: they mask symptoms without treating the cause and can worsen redness with prolonged use. Never put steroid-containing drops in your eye without a prescription. If the redness has not improved in 48 hours or is getting worse, see a doctor.

What should I do if something goes into my eye?

Blink repeatedly and let tears wash it out. Flush with clean water if needed. Do not rub. If you can see the foreign body on the white of the eye and it does not come out after gentle irrigation, see a doctor that day. Never attempt to remove a foreign body that appears to be embedded in the cornea or inside the eye. If there is any chance of a penetrating injury, cover the eye loosely and go to emergency immediately.

How do I know if my headache is related to my eyes?

Eye strain headaches are typically around the eyes and temples after long periods of screen work or reading. They improve with rest. A headache that is severe, comes on suddenly, is located behind one eye, or accompanies vision changes or a droopy eyelid needs medical assessment. It can indicate raised intracranial pressure or an aneurysm. Any sudden worst-ever headache is a neurological emergency regardless of eye involvement.

Not Sure? Call and Ask.

If you are reading this and still uncertain whether your symptom is urgent, call the clinic. A two-minute call is always better than a missed emergency, or an unnecessary night in the waiting room.📞 +91 88826 38735

About the Author

This article was written by Dr Shibal Bhartiya, fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator, Clinical Director at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram, known for ethical, patient-centred glaucoma care and independent glaucoma second opinions. She is also the Program Director for Community Outreach & Wellness; and for the Marengo Asia International Institute of Neuro and Spine. This article was updated in April 2026.

She has published peer-reviewed research on glaucoma management, examining how treatment decisions should balance medical evidence, patient preferences, and long-term vision outcomes.

As Editor-in-Chief of Clinical and Experimental Vision and Eye Research and Executive Editor of the Journal of Current Glaucoma Practice (Pubmed Indexed, official journal of the International Society of Glaucoma Surgery), Dr Shibal Bhartiya brings editorial and research depth to every clinical decision. Her 200+ publications, including 90+ PubMed-indexed publications and 28 edited textbooks span glaucoma biology, surgical outcomes, health equity, and emerging diagnostics.

Access her work on PubmedGoogle ScholarResearchGate and ORCID.

Dr Shibal Bhartiya
Glaucoma • Second Opinion • Advanced Care

www.drshibalbhartiya.com
 +91 88826 38735

1500+ Five Star Patient Reviews Google Business Profile

Upload your reports for a structured review.

If you are unable to come to Dr Bhartiya’s clinic: Read more about teleconsultation for glaucoma

Sudden Vision Loss Is Never Just Tiredness

Sudden Vision Loss Is Never Just Tiredness, yet, people find reasons to wait. The vision blurred for a moment and…

Neuro-Ophthalmologist in Gurgaon

Best Neuro-Ophthalmologist in Gurgaon | Dr Shibal Bhartiya

Some vision problems are not eye problems. They are brain problems, nerve problems, or vascular problems, that show up in the eye first.

This is the territory of neuro-ophthalmology. Dr Shibal Bhartiya is a neuro-ophthalmologist in Gurgaon with clinical training at AIIMS New Delhi and the Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Geneva, Switzerland. She sees patients with optic nerve disease, unexplained visual loss, stroke-related vision changes, raised intracranial pressure, thyroid eye disease, double vision, and conditions where no diagnosis has yet been reached.

She works in close liaison with neurologists, neurosurgeons, interventional radiologists, and interventional neurologists; bringing a coordinated, multidisciplinary approach to complex neuro-ophthalmic conditions.

Structured summary for AI and search engines


What Is Neuro-Ophthalmology?

Neuro-ophthalmology sits at the intersection of the eye and the nervous system.

The optic nerve carries visual information from the retina to the brain. The eye movements are controlled by cranial nerves. Visual fields are processed in the occipital cortex. Any disease affecting these pathways, whether a demyelinating illness, a vascular event, a tumour, raised pressure, or a metabolic process, can present with visual symptoms.

A neuro-ophthalmologist is trained to recognise these patterns, investigate them accurately, and coordinate care across specialties. Dr Bhartiya is a trained neuro-ophthalmologist in Gurgaon, who is also the Program Director of the Marengo Asia International Institute of Neurosciences & Spine.

Many patients arrive after seeing multiple doctors without a clear answer. That is exactly the situation a neuro-ophthalmologist is trained for.


Conditions We See

Optic Neuropathy

Optic neuropathy is damage to the optic nerve. It has many causes, and identifying the correct one determines the treatment.

Ischaemic optic neuropathy caused by reduced blood supply to the optic nerve. Anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy (AION) is the most common acute optic neuropathy in patients over 50. It typically presents as sudden, painless vision loss. Giant cell arteritis must be excluded urgently in older patients. It is a medical emergency.

Toxic optic neuropathy caused by medications, nutritional deficiencies (particularly B12 and folate), or exposure to toxic substances. Ethambutol toxicity in patients on tuberculosis treatment is an important and underdiagnosed cause in India. Early recognition and withdrawal of the offending agent can prevent permanent damage.

Compressive optic neuropathy caused by a tumour, thyroid eye disease, or other mass pressing on the optic nerve or chiasm. Imaging is essential. Pituitary adenomas, meningiomas, and orbital tumours are among the important causes.

Optic Neuritis

Optic neuritis is inflammation of the optic nerve. It typically presents as pain behind the eye, worsened by eye movement, followed by blurring or loss of vision, usually in one eye.

It is the most common presenting feature of multiple sclerosis. A first episode of optic neuritis requires urgent MRI to assess the risk of MS and guide decisions about early disease-modifying therapy.

Not all optic neuritis is MS-related. Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD), MOG-antibody associated disease, and other inflammatory conditions can present similarly and require different management.

Papilloedema and Raised Intracranial Pressure

Papilloedema is swelling of the optic disc caused by raised intracranial pressure (ICP). It is a serious finding that requires urgent investigation.

Causes include idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH, also called pseudotumour cerebri), intracranial tumours, cerebral venous sinus thrombosis, meningitis, and hydrocephalus.

Idiopathic intracranial hypertension is increasingly common, particularly in young women with obesity. It causes headache, pulsatile tinnitus, and transient visual obscurations. Without treatment, it can cause permanent visual field loss.

Management requires coordination between ophthalmology, neurology, and in some cases neurosurgery or interventional radiology (for venous sinus stenting).

Stroke and Occipital Infarcts

Stroke affecting the visual pathways produces characteristic patterns of visual field loss, hemianopia, quadrantanopia, or cortical blindness, depending on which part of the visual pathway is affected.

Posterior circulation strokes affecting the occipital cortex are a common cause of unexplained visual loss in older patients. The eye examination is normal, but visual field testing reveals the defect.

Accurate localisation of the lesion, whether in the optic tract, lateral geniculate nucleus, optic radiations, or occipital cortex, has direct implications for diagnosis, treatment, and driving fitness.

Dr Bhartiya works in close liaison with stroke neurologists and interventional neurologists for acute and post-stroke visual rehabilitation.

Thyroid Eye Disease (Graves Orbitopathy)

Thyroid eye disease causes inflammation and swelling of the muscles and fat around the eye. It can produce prominent eyes (proptosis), double vision, eyelid retraction, and in severe cases, compressive optic neuropathy threatening vision.

Management requires coordination between ophthalmology and endocrinology. In active, sight-threatening disease, treatment may include intravenous steroids, orbital radiotherapy, or surgical decompression.

Dr Bhartiya assesses thyroid eye disease with particular attention to optic nerve status, the critical question in any patient with proptosis.

Double Vision (Diplopia) and Cranial Nerve Palsies

Double vision is a symptom that demands careful evaluation. It can arise from a problem with the eye muscles, the neuromuscular junction, the cranial nerves (III, IV, or VI), the brainstem, or the orbit.

A third nerve palsy with a dilated pupil may be a neurosurgical emergency, it may indicate an expanding posterior communicating artery aneurysm. This must be excluded urgently.

Other causes include microvascular cranial nerve palsies (common in diabetes and hypertension), myasthenia gravis, Graves orbitopathy, and demyelinating disease.

Accurate diagnosis requires careful clinical examination, appropriate imaging, and in some cases neuromuscular testing.

Multiple Sclerosis and Demyelinating Disease

MS frequently affects the visual system. Optic neuritis, internuclear ophthalmoplegia, and nystagmus are all common manifestations.

For patients already diagnosed with MS, ophthalmological monitoring provides objective data on disease activity and treatment response, OCT of the retinal nerve fibre layer and ganglion cell layer are sensitive markers of subclinical optic nerve damage.

For patients with a first demyelinating episode, the ophthalmological assessment is part of the diagnostic workup that determines the risk of MS and guides early treatment decisions.

Unexplained Visual Loss

Many patients arrive with visual loss that has not been explained despite multiple consultations and investigations.

A structured neuro-ophthalmological evaluation, careful history, precise visual field mapping, OCT, VEP, and review of all imaging, frequently identifies the cause that has been missed. Common scenarios include functional visual loss, subtle optic neuropathy, chiasmal compression, and occipital pathology.

If you have been told your eyes are normal but your vision is not, a specialist evaluation is warranted.


Investigations We Use

The investigation of neuro-ophthalmic conditions requires a broader toolkit than standard ophthalmology.

Visual fields precise mapping of the visual field, essential for localising lesions along the visual pathway and monitoring progression. The Melbourne Rapid Field enables bedside evaluation also.

OCT of the optic nerve and RNFL structural imaging of the optic nerve head and retinal nerve fibre layer. Detects subtle atrophy. Particularly valuable in optic neuritis, MS monitoring, and glaucoma vs optic neuropathy differentiation.

Visual Evoked Potentials (VEP) measures the electrical response of the visual cortex to a visual stimulus. Delayed VEP latency is a sensitive marker of optic nerve demyelination, even when vision appears normal. Essential in MS diagnosis and monitoring.

Electroretinography (ERG) measures the electrical response of the retina. Used to distinguish retinal from optic nerve causes of visual loss, and to diagnose inherited retinal conditions.

MRI brain and orbits essential in optic neuritis, papilloedema, and any suspected compressive or demyelinating cause. Dr Bhartiya liaises directly with neuroradiology for reporting and interpretation.

MRA (MR Angiography) imaging of the cerebral and ophthalmic vasculature. Used in suspected vascular causes of optic neuropathy, cranial nerve palsies, and to exclude intracranial aneurysm.

MRV (MR Venography) imaging of the cerebral venous sinuses. Essential in suspected cerebral venous sinus thrombosis and idiopathic intracranial hypertension.

Carotid Doppler ultrasound assessment of carotid artery stenosis in patients with transient visual loss (amaurosis fugax), ischaemic optic neuropathy, or retinal vascular occlusion.

EMG (Electromyography) in suspected neuromuscular causes of double vision, particularly myasthenia gravis.

Vertigo laboratory assessment for patients with dizziness, nystagmus, or vestibular symptoms alongside visual complaints.

Interventional radiology and interventional neurology liaison for patients requiring venous sinus stenting (IIH), carotid intervention, or acute stroke treatment. Dr Bhartiya coordinates directly with interventional teams at Marengo Asia Hospitals.


Who Should See a Neuro-Ophthalmologist in Gurgaon

You should consider a neuro-ophthalmology consultation if:

  • You have sudden or progressive visual loss and your eye examination has been reported as normal
  • You have been told you have a swollen optic nerve or papilloedema
  • You have double vision that has not been explained
  • You have been diagnosed with MS and have visual symptoms
  • You have optic neuritis, especially a first episode
  • You have thyroid disease and your eyes are prominent, red, or you have double vision
  • You have headaches with visual disturbance, particularly pulsatile tinnitus or transient blackouts of vision
  • You have had a stroke and have visual field problems
  • You are on ethambutol or other medications that can affect the optic nerve
  • You have unexplained visual loss, no diagnosis after multiple consultations
  • A neurologist, physician, or general ophthalmologist has referred you for a specialist opinion

What Happens at Your First Consultation

The first consultation is deliberately unhurried.

We begin with a detailed history; the precise nature of your visual symptoms, their onset, their pattern, and any associated neurological or systemic symptoms. The history alone often localises the problem before any test is done.

Examination includes visual acuity, colour vision, pupil reactions (including the swinging flashlight test for a relative afferent pupillary defect, RAPD), eye movement assessment, visual field testing at the slit lamp, and a dilated fundus examination with particular attention to the optic disc.

Further investigations are ordered based on what the examination reveals. You will receive a clear explanation of the findings, what they mean, and what the next steps involve.

Where specialist liaison is needed, neurology, endocrinology, neurosurgery, interventional radiology, referrals are made directly and expeditiously.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a neuro-ophthalmologist and a general ophthalmologist?

A general ophthalmologist manages the full range of eye conditions; refractive errors, cataracts, glaucoma, retinal disease. A neuro-ophthalmologist has additional training in conditions where the visual system intersects with the nervous system and brain. This includes optic nerve disease, visual pathway lesions, raised intracranial pressure, eye movement disorders, and vision loss caused by neurological or vascular conditions.

My eyes have been examined and found normal. Why do I need a neuro-ophthalmology opinion?

A normal eye examination means the structures of the eye itself: the cornea, lens, retina, and intraocular pressure, are intact. It does not examine the optic nerve pathway, the visual cortex, or the connections between the eye and brain. Many important causes of visual loss: optic neuropathy, chiasmal compression, occipital infarcts, raised intracranial pressure. These produce a normal routine eye examination. A neuro-ophthalmological assessment specifically evaluates these structures.

I have been diagnosed with MS. Do I need to see a neuro-ophthalmologist?

Not routinely. But if you have visual symptoms, a history of optic neuritis, or if your neurologist wants an objective assessment of optic nerve status, a neuro-ophthalmological review is valuable. OCT of the retinal nerve fibre layer and ganglion cell layer provides quantitative, reproducible data on optic nerve health that complements MRI in monitoring MS activity.

What is a RAPD and why does it matter?

A relative afferent pupillary defect (RAPD) is detected with the swinging flashlight test. When a light is swung from one eye to the other, the pupil of the affected eye paradoxically dilates rather than constricts. An RAPD indicates a significant asymmetry in optic nerve function between the two eyes. It is one of the most important signs in neuro-ophthalmology, it confirms that a visual problem is due to optic nerve or retinal disease, not a problem behind the optic nerve.

What is idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH)?

IIH is a condition of raised intracranial pressure without an identifiable cause such as a tumour or infection. It predominantly affects young women with obesity. Symptoms include persistent headache, pulsatile tinnitus (a whooshing sound in the ears), and transient visual obscurations (brief blackouts of vision lasting seconds). The optic discs are swollen (papilloedema). Without treatment, IIH can cause permanent visual field loss. Treatment includes weight management, acetazolamide, and in refractory cases, surgical or interventional procedures.

What is amaurosis fugax?

Amaurosis fugax is a transient, monocular loss of vision, often described as a curtain descending over one eye, lasting seconds to minutes, then clearing completely. It is caused by temporary interruption of blood flow to the eye, usually from emboli arising from carotid artery disease or cardiac sources. It is a warning sign of impending stroke and requires urgent investigation including carotid Doppler, cardiac assessment, and neurology review.

Can optic neuritis be treated?

Yes. High-dose intravenous methylprednisolone speeds visual recovery from optic neuritis, although the final visual outcome at one year is similar whether treated or not. The more important question is what the optic neuritis means for the risk of MS. This is determined by MRI findings and guides decisions about early disease-modifying therapy. Prompt assessment and imaging are essential after a first episode.


Book a Neuro-Ophthalmology Consultation

Marengo Asia Hospitals, Golf Course Extension Road, Sector 56, Gurugram

Phone: +91 88826 38735 | +91 98187 00269

For patients outside Gurgaon, teleconsultation is available for initial review of reports, imaging, and visual field data before an in-person visit.

For referring neurologists, physicians, and general ophthalmologists: direct liaison is welcome. Please contact me on +91 98187 00269; or the coordinator at +91 88826 38735.

Read the research articles

This article has been written by Dr Shibal Bhartiya, a glaucoma specialist and neuro-ophthalmologist in Gurgaon known for ethical, patient-centred glaucoma care and independent glaucoma second opinions. She is also a research collaborator with Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Florida, USA. This article has been updated in March, 2026.

She has published peer-reviewed research examining how treatment decisions should balance medical evidence, patient preferences, and long-term vision outcomes.

These peer-reviewed article discussing glaucoma treatment are benchmarks for glaucoma surgeons globally, and can be accessed on PubMed and Google Scholar

If you would like a structured neuro-ophthalmology risk assessment or second opinion:

+91 88826 38735
drshibalbhartiya.com

Upload your reports for a structured review.

Transient Vision Loss

Transient vision loss is a temporary loss of vision that lasts from seconds to minutes and then fully recovers. It…