Can Stress Affect Eyesight?

Stress can affect your eyesight, and contribute to symptoms such as eye strain, headaches, dry eyes, blurred vision, and difficulty focusing, even when the eyes themselves are healthy. A comprehensive eye examination can help determine whether visual symptoms are related to stress, screen use, dry eyes, or an underlying eye condition requiring treatment.

Can Stress Affect Eyesight? What Happens to Your Eyes Under Pressure

The short answer: Yes — stress affects eyesight in real, measurable ways. It is not imagined and it is not trivial. Acute stress dilates the pupil, blurs near focus, and may spike eye pressure. Chronic stress drives cortisol elevation, disrupts sleep, worsens dry eye, and is directly linked to central serous retinopathy, a condition that puts fluid under the retina and blurs central vision.


How does stress affect the eye physiologically?

The stress response activates the sympathetic nervous system — the “fight or flight” system. This produces rapid, measurable changes in the eye:

Pupil dilation (mydriasis) — the pupil enlarges to take in more visual information. This increases depth of field but reduces near focus clarity and increases glare sensitivity.

Reduced blink rate — stress and cognitive load dramatically reduce blinking, worsening tear film stability and dry eye symptoms.

Elevated cortisol — the primary stress hormone. Chronically elevated cortisol affects aqueous humour dynamics, disrupts the blood-retinal barrier, and is directly implicated in central serous retinopathy.

Intraocular pressure fluctuations — acute psychological stress may raise IOP transiently. In glaucoma patients with borderline pressure control, stress-related IOP spikes may accelerate optic nerve damage.

Vascular changes — stress-driven blood pressure elevation affects retinal and optic nerve blood flow. Chronic vascular stress is associated with retinal vein occlusion and non-arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy (NAION). Hypertension, diabetes, and atherosclerosis compromise blood flow to the eye and damage blood vessels, increasing the risk of sudden, permanent vision loss


Conditions directly linked to stress that affect eyesight

Central serous retinopathy (CSR)

The strongest stress-eye link in clinical practice. CSR occurs when the blood-retinal barrier breaks down under cortisol load, allowing fluid to accumulate under the central retina. Vision becomes blurry, objects appear smaller (micropsia), colours are less saturated, and a grey or dark spot appears in central vision. Classically affects driven, high-achieving men aged 25–55 — often during periods of intense work pressure or personal crisis. The association is well established in literature. Acute CSR usually resolves within 3 months of stress reduction. Chronic CSR (lasting over 4 months) requires laser or photodynamic therapy.

Glaucoma progression

Stress does not cause glaucoma — but it may worsen it. Elevated cortisol increases aqueous production and IOP. Sympathetic activation reduces ocular perfusion pressure. Sleep disruption from stress is independently associated with glaucoma progression. For patients already diagnosed, stress management is a legitimate component of glaucoma care — not an alternative to drops, but an adjunct.

Dry eye exacerbation

Stress reduces blink rate, elevates inflammatory cytokines on the ocular surface, and disrupts sleep (which is when the ocular surface recovers). All three mechanisms worsen dry eye. This is why dry eye symptoms consistently spike during exams, deadlines, and personal crises.

Migraine and visual aura

Stress is the most commonly reported migraine trigger. Stress-induced migraine produces visual aura — zigzag lines, blind spots, shimmering arcs — that can be alarming, especially on first presentation.

Functional visual disturbance

Anxiety and acute stress can produce genuine visual symptoms with no structural cause: tunnel vision, visual snow overlay, difficulty focusing, or a dreamlike quality to vision. These are neurological — not psychiatric — phenomena and are real, not imagined.

Convergence insufficiency

Under stress and fatigue, the eyes’ ability to work together for near focus degrades. Reading becomes difficult, words appear to move, and there is a vague headache behind the eyes. Common in students during exam periods and in adults during high-pressure work phases.


Problems, Reasons, and Solutions

Stress-Related SymptomLikely MechanismWhat Helps
Blurry near vision, worse under pressurePupil dilation + convergence fatigueRest, stress reduction, screen breaks
Dry, burning eyes during deadlinesReduced blink rate + inflammationPreservative-free drops + conscious blinking
Central blur + grey spot + objects smallerCentral serous retinopathy (CSR)Urgent OCT + stress reduction
Headache + visual auraStress-triggered migraineNeurology + migraine management
Fluctuating IOP in glaucoma patientsCortisol + sympathetic activationSleep hygiene + stress management as adjunct
Dreamlike or unreal visionFunctional / anxiety-drivenReassurance + neurological assessment
Eye strain + reading difficulty, exam periodsConvergence insufficiencyOrthoptic exercises + rest

What doctors often miss

Central serous retinopathy is sometimes misdiagnosed as dry eye or migraine in its early stages. The characteristic symptom, a central grey spot with objects appearing slightly smaller, combined with a history of high stress in a young to middle-aged man should prompt immediate OCT. Delay converts acute, reversible CSR into chronic CSR with permanent retinal damage.

Stress-related IOP elevation in glaucoma is not routinely discussed at clinic visits. Asking patients about sleep quality, work stress, and cortisol-elevating habits (high caffeine, irregular sleep) is a legitimate part of glaucoma management. It is not polite conversation, it is physiology.


If stress is affecting your vision — whether blurry, dry, or producing a central grey spot — Dr Shibal Bhartiya offers a complete assessment including OCT, tear film evaluation, and IOP monitoring in Gurgaon.

📞 +91 88826 38735 | www.drshibalbhartiya.com Upload previous eye test results for a pre-consultation review.


Frequently asked questions

Can stress cause permanent eye damage?

Chronic CSR can cause permanent central vision loss if left untreated. Stress-related IOP spikes can accelerate glaucoma progression in susceptible patients. In most people, stress-related visual symptoms are reversible. The key is not to dismiss them.

Can anxiety cause vision problems?

Yes. Anxiety produces pupil dilation, reduces blink rate, causes convergence insufficiency, and can produce functional visual disturbances including tunnel vision and visual snow. These are real — and they resolve with anxiety management.

Does stress raise eye pressure?

Yes — acutely. Psychological stress activates the sympathetic nervous system and transiently raises IOP. In people with borderline glaucoma control, this is clinically relevant.

Can meditation or yoga help eye problems?

There is evidence that stress reduction — through any reliable method — reduces cortisol, stabilises IOP, improves sleep, and reduces CSR recurrence. This is not alternative medicine; it is physiology. It does not replace treatment but meaningfully supports it.

What is central serous retinopathy and is it serious?

CSR is fluid accumulation under the central retina, driven by cortisol and stress. It is serious if untreated — chronic CSR causes irreversible macular damage. Acute CSR usually resolves within 3 months. If you notice a central grey spot or objects looking smaller in one eye, seek assessment within days.

Can work stress cause blurry vision? Can stress affect eyesight?

Yes — through multiple mechanisms: dry eye from reduced blinking, convergence fatigue, CSR in susceptible individuals, and migraine. If blurry vision is consistently worse during high-stress periods and better on rest, the link is worth investigating.


This page is part of the Neuro-Ophthalmology hub. Read about our full approach to neurological vision conditions. you may also want to read more about Glaucoma.


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 eye care and independent neuro-ophthalmology and glaucoma second opinions. She is also the Program Director for Community Outreach & Wellness; and for the Marengo Asia International Institute of Neuro and Spine.

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.

1500+ Five Star Patient Reviews Google Business Profile

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

Read her research on PubMed | Google Scholar | ResearchGate | ORCID

Upload your reports for a structured review.| www.drshibalbhartiya.com | +91 88826 38735

Leave a review on Google

Eyes Hurt After Screen Use

Eye discomfort after screen use is often caused by digital eye strain, dry eyes, reduced blinking, uncorrected vision problems, or prolonged focusing at close distances. If eye pain is severe, persistent, associated with blurred vision, headaches, redness, or does not improve with rest, a comprehensive eye examination can help identify underlying causes and rule out more serious eye conditions.

Eyes Hurt After Screen Use: Why It Happens and How to Stop It

Eye pain after screen use is digital eye strain — one of the fastest-growing eye complaints in India, and especially high tech cities like Gurgaon. It is caused by reduced blinking, sustained near focus, screen glare, and poor posture. It will not damage your eyes permanently in most cases. But it will get worse if ignored, and in some people it signals an underlying problem that deserves attention, explains Dr Shibal Bhartiya.

Dr Shibal Bhartiya is a fellowship-trained eye 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.


Why screens hurt your eyes

When you look at a screen, blink rate drops by 60–70% — from a normal 15–20 blinks per minute to as few as 5. Each blink renews the tear film. When blinking stops, the tear film breaks up, the corneal surface dries, and pain receptors fire. Simultaneously, the ciliary muscle — which controls near focus — contracts continuously for hours. Sustained ciliary spasm produces a deep aching pain behind the eyes that worsens through the day.

Add screen glare, blue-wavelength light, and forward head posture compressing the cervical spine — and you have the full picture of why screens hurt.


Symptoms of digital eye strain

Burning or aching in or around the eyes. Blurry vision that fluctuates. Headache — typically frontal, worse in the afternoon. Difficulty shifting focus between near and far. Sensitivity to light. Dry, gritty, or watery eyes. Neck and shoulder pain accompanying eye discomfort.


Dry Eyes and Digital Eye Strain in Gurgaon

Many people in Gurgaon spend long hours on computers, phones, and other digital devices. Reduced blinking during screen use can contribute to dry eyes, eye strain, headaches, blurred vision, burning, watering, and difficulty focusing.

These symptoms may be further aggravated by factors common in Gurgaon, including air-conditioned office environments, long working hours, dry weather, air pollution, dust, and ongoing construction activity. Together, these factors can affect the stability of the tear film and make the eyes feel tired, irritated, or uncomfortable throughout the day.

A comprehensive eye examination can help determine whether symptoms are related to dry eye disease, digital eye strain, an uncorrected vision problem, or a combination of factors. Early assessment can often improve comfort, productivity, and visual quality.

Dr Shibal Bhartiya works with corporates, professionals, and frequent screen users in Gurgaon on the diagnosis and management of dry eye disease, digital eye strain, and healthy screen-use habits. To book an eye examination or arrange an eye health awareness session for your organisation, call +91 88826 38735 or visit drshibalbhartiya.com.


What actually helps

The 20-20-20 rule: Every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds. This relaxes the ciliary muscle and allows the tear film to renew. Simple, evidence-based, consistently underused.

Conscious blinking: During screen use, blink deliberately and fully every few minutes. This is not automatic — you have to practise it. A complete blink fully renews the tear film; an incomplete blink (the “squint-blink” most people do on screens) does not.

Screen position: The top of the screen should be at or just below eye level. Looking slightly downward reduces the exposed ocular surface and slows tear evaporation.

Screen distance: 50–70 cm from the face. Closer than this increases the accommodative demand on the ciliary muscle.

Preservative-free lubricant drops: Used before screen sessions and during breaks — not after symptoms develop. Prevents rather than chases the problem.

Ambient lighting: The room should be as bright as the screen. Contrast between a bright screen and a dark room forces the pupil to work harder and accelerates fatigue.

Blue light glasses: Evidence for blue light as the primary cause of digital eye strain is weak. Glare reduction and proper screen positioning matter more. They do no harm — but do not substitute for the above.


When it is more than screen strain

See an eye specialist if: symptoms persist on rest days away from screens, if one eye hurts more than the other, if vision is blurry even after stopping screen use, or if you have headaches every morning before screens begin. These patterns suggest dry eye disease, refractive error, binocular vision dysfunction, or early glaucoma — none of which resolve with screen hygiene alone.


If screen-related eye pain is affecting your work or daily life, a full assessment takes under an hour. Dr Shibal Bhartiya — dry eye specialist and glaucoma specialist in Gurgaon — will identify whether this is screen strain or something that needs treatment. 📞 +91 88826 38735 | www.drshibalbhartiya.com


This article is part of the Dry Eye Hub. Please also read Basics of Dry Eye, Dry Eye Second Opinion and Dry Eye: A Chronic Disease. Why Vision Becomes Blurred After Reading or Screen Use, and Why Are Your Dry Eye Drops Not Working may also help you understand your problem better.

You may also want to read this article written by Dr Bhartiya for NDTV online. And listen to her talk about dry eyes here.


Frequently Asked Questions

Why do my eyes hurt after using a screen?

Eye discomfort after screen use is commonly caused by digital eye strain, dry eyes, reduced blinking, prolonged near work, or an uncorrected vision problem.

Can screen time cause dry eyes?

Yes. People blink less frequently while using computers, phones, and tablets. Reduced blinking can increase tear evaporation and contribute to dry eye symptoms.

What are the symptoms of digital eye strain?

Digital eye strain may cause eye pain, eye fatigue, headaches, burning, watering, blurred vision, dryness, difficulty focusing, and discomfort after prolonged screen use.

Why are dry eyes and digital eye strain common in Gurgaon?

Long screen hours, air-conditioned offices, dry weather, pollution, dust, and construction activity can contribute to dry eyes and digital eye strain among professionals in Gurgaon.

When should I see an eye specialist for eye pain after screen use?

You should seek an eye examination if symptoms are severe, persistent, associated with blurred vision, redness, headaches, light sensitivity, or do not improve with rest and screen breaks.

Can digital eye strain be treated?

Treatment depends on the cause and may include managing dry eyes, improving screen ergonomics, taking regular breaks, updating glasses prescriptions, and addressing underlying eye conditions.


About the Author

This article was written by Dr Shibal Bhartiya, fellowship-trained eye 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.

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.

1500+ Five Star Patient Reviews Google Business Profile

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

Read her research on PubMed | Google Scholar | ResearchGate | ORCID

Upload your reports for a structured review.| www.drshibalbhartiya.com | +91 88826 38735

Leave a review on Google

Is Your Screen Giving You Dry Eyes?

Yes. Prolonged screen use reduces your blink rate by up to 60%, which destabilises the tear film and causes dry eye disease. Symptoms include burning, grittiness, blurred vision, and watering eyes. If you spend more than four hours a day on screens, you are at significant risk.

You blink about 15 times a minute when you are not looking at a screen. Put a phone or laptop in front of you, and that number drops to five or six. Each blink spreads a fresh layer of tears across your eye surface. Fewer blinks mean faster tear evaporation. Faster evaporation means dry eye.

This is not a minor inconvenience. It is a disease process. And in Gurgaon, where long office hours, air conditioning, and pollution compound the problem, it is one of the most common reasons patients come to see me.


What Exactly Happens to Your Eyes on a Screen

Your tears have three layers: an oily outer layer, a watery middle layer, and a mucus base. The oily layer, produced by the meibomian glands along your eyelid margins, is the most important for stability. Every time you blink, these glands express a fresh film of oil that slows evaporation.

When you stare at a screen, two things happen at once. Your blink rate falls sharply. And you tend to hold your eyes open wider, increasing the surface area exposed to air. The tear film breaks up faster than it can be replaced. The result is what we call evaporative dry eye disease — the most common form.

Research involving over 1,300 students found that nearly one in three people who use screens for six or more hours daily develop clinically diagnosable dry eye disease — not just discomfort, but measurable damage to the tear film and ocular surface.


Symptoms: What Screen-Related Dry Eye Feels Like

Patients describe it differently. Some say their eyes feel gritty, as if there is sand under the lid. Others notice burning, redness, or a heaviness at the end of the day. Many come in saying their eyes water constantly — which seems contradictory, but is classic dry eye. The surface dries, the eye panics, and the lacrimal gland floods it with reflex tears that do not have the right composition to actually help.

Some people ask: Why do my eyes feel dry after using my phone?” “Can screen time cause blurry vision?” “My eyes burn after computer work.” “Why do my eyes feel tired even after sleeping?” “How do screens affect blinking?” “Why does vision fluctuate during screen use?”

The answer to all these questions is often dryness of eyes.

Other symptoms include:

  • Blurred vision that clears when you blink
  • Sensitivity to light, especially in air-conditioned rooms
  • Eye fatigue after reading or driving
  • Difficulty wearing contact lenses

Studies show that burning, dryness, and eye pain are among the most frequently reported symptoms in people who spend extended time in front of screens, with many experiencing symptoms that persist well beyond working hours.

If your symptoms are worse by evening, worse in AC environments, and worse in dry weather — screen-related dry eye is the most likely cause.


Why Gurgaon Makes It Worse

Most cities have one environmental aggravator. Gurgaon has several operating simultaneously.

The air quality in and around Gurugram is consistently poor. Particulate matter and pollutants deposit on the ocular surface, triggering inflammation that compromises the tear film even before you open your laptop. Add to this the aggressive air conditioning in most offices and malls — which pulls moisture from the air and from your eyes — and a working day in Gurgaon is a sustained assault on tear film stability.

Then add the screen.

Patients who work eight-hour days in air-conditioned offices with poor air quality and high screen time are in a perfect storm. I see this combination daily. It is not unusual for someone in their late twenties or early thirties to present with tear film parameters more consistent with a 50-year-old.

You may want to read this article, that I wrote for the Times of India.

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/can-extended-screen-time-damage-our-eyesight-a-doctor-weighs-in/articleshow/83749175.cms


The 20-20-20 Rule: Useful, But Not Enough

You have likely heard of the 20-20-20 rule: every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds. It is a reasonable starting point. It prompts you to blink more and reduces accommodative stress on the focusing muscles.

But for established dry eye disease, it is not treatment. It is habit maintenance. If your meibomian glands are already dysfunctional — blocked, inflamed, or atrophied — no amount of screen breaks will restore their function without medical intervention.

Think of it this way: telling someone with a broken leg to take shorter walks is kind advice. But the leg still needs to be set.


When to See a Specialist

Many patients manage dry eye with over-the-counter lubricating drops for months or years before seeking help. This is understandable, but it often means the underlying cause — meibomian gland dysfunction, ocular surface inflammation, or tear film instability — progresses untreated.

See a dry eye specialist if:

  • Lubricating drops help briefly but symptoms return within an hour
  • You wake up with eye discomfort or sticky lids
  • Your vision fluctuates through the day
  • Symptoms are affecting your ability to work or drive
  • You have been using drops for more than three months without improvement

A proper dry eye assessment takes around 30 minutes and includes tear film measurement, meibomian gland evaluation, and ocular surface staining. It gives you a diagnosis, not just a description of your symptoms.

Seeing Another Specialist About Dry Eye?

A second opinion is always reasonable when symptoms persist despite treatment. Dry eye is frequently undertreated because it is underdiagnosed — many patients are managed on lubricating drops alone without a full tear film assessment or meibomian gland evaluation.

If you have been told your eyes are “just dry” without a formal diagnosis, or if your current treatment is not giving you lasting relief, a structured review can clarify what is actually driving your symptoms and whether your treatment matches the cause.

Dr Shibal Bhartiya offers dry eye second opinion consultations at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Sector 56, Gurugram. Bring your current drop regimen, any previous reports, and a list of your symptoms and their pattern through the day.

📞 +91 88826 38735


What Treatment Actually Looks Like

Treatment depends on what is driving the dry eye. Screen-related dry eye is almost always evaporative, which means meibomian gland dysfunction is at the centre of it.

The approach I use combines:

Warm compresses and lid hygiene — daily, applied consistently for at least four weeks before judging results. This softens blocked meibomian secretions and restores gland function over time.

Preservative-free lubricating drops — frequency matters. If you are using drops twice a day but your tear film breaks up every three seconds, the maths does not work. Most patients need drops every one to two hours initially.

Anti-inflammatory treatment — in moderate to severe cases, a short course of topical anti-inflammatory medication reduces the surface inflammation that perpetuates the cycle.

Environmental modification — a humidifier at your workstation, positioning your screen below eye level (to reduce exposed surface area), and reducing direct airflow from AC vents toward your face.

In cases with significant meibomian gland atrophy, in-office procedures that express and heat the glands directly can restore function that drops and compresses alone cannot achieve.


Screen Dry Eye vs Normal Eye Tiredness: How to Tell the Difference

Normal Eye TirednessScreen-Related Dry Eye Disease
When it startsEnd of a long dayWithin hours of screen use, most days
How it feelsHeavy, sleepy eyesBurning, gritty, sandy, or stinging
VisionSlightly blurred when tiredFluctuates and clears on blinking
After restFully resolved by morningPersists or returns quickly next day
WateringRareCommon — reflex tearing
AC sensitivityMildNoticeably worse in air-conditioned rooms
DropsNot neededTemporary relief only
What it meansRest is enoughTear film is compromised — see a specialist

A Note on Glaucoma Eye Drops and Dry Eye

If you have glaucoma and use topical eye drops, be aware that most preserved antiglaucoma drops — particularly those containing benzalkonium chloride — can cause and worsen dry eye disease. This is a combination I see frequently in my practice. Switching to preservative-free formulations, where possible, makes a significant difference. If you use glaucoma drops and also experience dry eye symptoms, bring both to your specialist’s attention.


The Bottom Line

Your screen is not going to damage your eyes permanently if you act on the symptoms early. Dry eye from digital device use is common, well understood, and treatable. What makes it worse is ignoring it, self-managing with inadequate treatment, or assuming it will resolve on its own.

Also remember:

  • Dry eyes becoming more common in children and younger adults.
  • Menopause increases dryness of eyes.
  • Seeing clearly is not always the same as seeing comfortably.
  • Screen-related symptoms may reflect tear film instability rather than a glasses problem.
  • More screen time does not always mean more damage, but it can increase symptom burden.

If your eyes are telling you something by the end of every working day, listen.

Here are some tips of preventing dry eye, especially in the summer


FAQs

Can screen time actually cause dry eye disease, or just discomfort?

It can cause dry eye disease — not just temporary discomfort. Prolonged screen use reduces blink rate significantly, which destabilises the tear film and triggers the inflammatory cycle underlying dry eye disease. In people who spend six or more hours daily on screens, clinically diagnosable dry eye is common, not just eye strain. The difference matters because discomfort resolves with rest. Dry eye disease does not.


How many hours of screen time is too much for eye health?

There is no universally safe threshold, but research consistently shows that symptoms rise sharply beyond four hours of continuous screen use per day. What matters as much as total hours is whether you take breaks, blink consciously, and manage your environment. Eight hours broken into segments with proper hygiene is less damaging than four hours of uninterrupted staring in a cold, air-conditioned room.


Why do my eyes water if they are dry?

This is one of the most common questions I hear. When the eye surface dries and becomes irritated, the lacrimal gland responds with a flood of reflex tears. These tears are watery and thin — they do not have the oily, stable composition of normal tears. They wash across the surface and spill over the lid margin, but they do not actually fix the dryness. Watering eyes and dry eye disease are not opposites. They frequently occur together.


Do blue light glasses help with dry eye?

Blue light glasses may reduce some visual discomfort and improve sleep if worn in the evening, but they do not treat dry eye disease. Dry eye from screens is caused by reduced blinking and tear film instability — not by the wavelength of light reaching your eyes. If your main symptom is dryness, burning, or grittiness, blue light glasses will not address the underlying problem.

Here’s some information about blue light blocking glasses, in hindi.


Can dry eye from screens be permanently cured?

For most patients, dry eye disease is a chronic condition that is managed rather than cured. However, many people achieve complete symptom control with the right combination of treatment and habit change. The goal is to restore meibomian gland function, stabilise the tear film, and reduce environmental triggers. With consistent treatment, the majority of patients with screen-related dry eye see significant, sustained improvement.


When should I stop using over-the-counter drops and see a specialist?

Stop managing it yourself if drops give you less than an hour of relief, if symptoms are affecting your ability to work or drive, if you wake up with sticky or uncomfortable eyes, or if you have been using drops for more than three months without real improvement. Over-the-counter drops manage symptoms. They do not treat the underlying cause. A 30-minute specialist assessment will tell you what is actually driving the dry eye — and what will actually fix it.


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.

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.

1500+ Five Star Patient Reviews Google Business Profile

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

Read her research on PubMed | Google Scholar | ResearchGate | ORCID

Upload your reports for a structured review.| www.drshibalbhartiya.com | +91 88826 38735

Leave a review on Google


Read More

Basics of Dry Eye

Dry Eye Second Opinion

Dry Eye: A Chronic Disease

Why Do Women Get Dry Eye More Often?

Menopause and Dry Eye

Dry Eyes: Natural Remedies

Dry Eyes: Tips to Soothe Sore Eyes

Why Dry Eye Is Worse in Air Conditioning and on Flights

Why Vision Becomes Blurred After Reading or Screen Use

Screen Fatigue

Why Your Eyes Water Constantly

Omega-3 and Dry Eye

Why Are Your Dry Eye Drops Not Working

Autologous Serum Eye Drops for Severe Dry Eye

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