Why is My Eyelid Twitching

Most eyelid twitching is caused by fatigue, stress, caffeine, eye strain, or dry eye disease and is usually harmless. Persistent eyelid twitching, facial involvement, eyelid drooping, or associated vision changes should be evaluated by an eye specialist to identify underlying causes and determine whether further investigation is needed.

An eyelid that twitches on its own is one of the most common eye complaints I hear in clinic. It starts innocuously — a faint flicker under the eye, usually just as you are about to fall asleep or are deep in a meeting — and then it simply refuses to stop. Most people have quietly convinced themselves it is either stress or a sign of something terrible. The truth, as usual, is more nuanced.

As a glaucoma and neuro-ophthalmology specialist, I see eyelid twitching on a spectrum: from completely benign spasms that resolve on their own, to rarer neurological conditions that need prompt evaluation. Knowing which is which makes all the difference.

This article walks you through the types of eyelid twitching, what each pattern means clinically, the home measures that actually help, and the specific signs that should bring you to a specialist.

Quick Answer: Most eyelid twitching — called myokymia — is harmless and triggered by fatigue, caffeine, screen time, or stress. It resolves on its own within days to weeks. However, twitching that spreads to involve the face, forces your eye shut, occurs in one eye only alongside other neurological symptoms, or persists beyond six weeks warrants a specialist evaluation to rule out blepharospasm, hemifacial spasm, or other conditions.

Dr 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.

Types of Eyelid Twitching: What Each Pattern Tells Me

Not all eyelid twitching is the same. Before reaching for a diagnosis, I look at whether the twitch is in one or both eyes, whether it involves the lower lid or upper lid, whether it forces the eye shut, and whether it has spread beyond the eye itself.

Symptom / PatternWhat It MeansWhat To Do About It
Fine flicker, lower lid, one eyeMyokymia — benign spontaneous spasm of the orbicularis muscle. The commonest presentation. Not a disease.Rest, reduce caffeine and screen time. Resolves within days to weeks.
Both upper and lower lids, one or both eyes, stress-linkedStill likely myokymia, possibly worsened by sleep deprivation or anxiety. No neurological significance on its own.Prioritise sleep. Limit caffeine after noon. Warm compress to relax the lid.
Involuntary forceful closure, both eyes, difficulty keeping eyes openBenign essential blepharospasm — a focal dystonia. Not benign in terms of impact on daily life; needs treatment.See a neuro-ophthalmologist. Botulinum toxin injection is the gold-standard treatment.
Twitching begins at the eye and spreads to the cheek, mouth or jaw, one side onlyHemifacial spasm — often caused by a blood vessel compressing the facial nerve. Requires investigation.MRI brain with specific facial nerve sequences. Neurosurgical or botulinum toxin options depending on cause.
Upper lid droops between twitching episodesPossible third nerve or levator involvement. Less common; needs prompt neuro-ophthalmological review.Same-week specialist appointment. Rule out aneurysm or myasthenia gravis.
Twitching in a child, especially with other facial movementsTic disorder (transient or chronic tic). Often worsens with attention placed on it.Paediatric neurology referral if persistent beyond 4 weeks or accompanied by behavioural changes.
Twitching alongside dry, gritty, or burning eyesDry eye or ocular surface irritation can drive lid spasm as a reflex protective mechanism.Treat the underlying dry eye first — preservative-free artificial tears, warm compresses, omega-3 supplementation. See [dry eye hub].

Common Causes of Eyelid Twitching

Symptom / PatternWhat It MeansWhat To Do About It
Caffeine excessLowers the threshold for spontaneous muscle firing in the orbicularis oculi.Cut back to one to two cups per day. Note whether twitching reduces within 72 hours.
Sleep deprivationEven one poor night amplifies neuromuscular excitability.Seven to eight hours of sleep is the single most effective intervention for myokymia.
Extended screen timeDigital eye strain creates a cycle of incomplete blinking, dryness, and reflex spasm.Follow the 20-20-20 rule: every 20 minutes, look 20 feet away for 20 seconds. See [dry eye hub].
Stress and anxietyCortisol and adrenaline sensitise peripheral motor neurons.The twitch often outlasts the stressor by days. Stress reduction helps but the spasm resolves on its own timeline.
Alcohol and smokingBoth are neuromuscular irritants when consumed in excess.Reduce or eliminate during a twitching episode and observe.
Nutritional deficiency — magnesium, B12Magnesium deficiency in particular is associated with increased muscle excitability.Ask your physician to check levels before self-supplementing.
Glaucoma eye drops (prostaglandin analogues)Some glaucoma medications can cause periorbital twitching or irritation as a side effect.Tell your glaucoma specialist. Do not stop drops without guidance. See [glaucoma hub].
AllergiesAllergic conjunctivitis causes itching, rubbing, and secondary lid spasm.Antihistamine eye drops can help. Avoid rubbing — it worsens both allergy and spasm.

When To See a Doctor About Eyelid Twitching

The vast majority of eyelid twitches require no medical attention. But there are patterns I want every patient to recognise as reasons to come in without delay.

Important: See a specialist if any of the following apply. Do not wait for a routine appointment if you have drooping or double vision alongside the twitch.
  • The twitch involves only one eye and has lasted more than six weeks without improvement
  • The twitching spreads to your cheek, lips, or jaw on the same side — this pattern suggests hemifacial spasm, not myokymia
  • Your eye is being forced fully shut and you are struggling to keep it open in bright light or when driving
  • You notice drooping of the upper eyelid (ptosis) between spasms
  • You are seeing double, have facial weakness, or the twitch began after a head injury
  • A child has facial twitching — particularly if it is repetitive, stereotyped, and worsens when anxious
  • You are on glaucoma medications and the twitching began or worsened after starting a new drop
  • Your vision has changed in the eye that is twitching

Home Measures That Actually Help

For garden-variety myokymia, there is often no treatment required — only reassurance and a few habit changes. Here is what the evidence supports, and what I tell my own patients.

  • Reduce caffeine: this is the single most clinically consistent trigger I encounter. Cut back for one week and note the difference.
  • Prioritise sleep: aim for seven to eight hours. If you are sleep-deprived for any reason, expect the twitch to worsen.
  • Warm compress: apply a clean warm cloth to the closed eye for five to ten minutes. This relaxes the orbicularis muscle and improves lid margin blood flow.
  • Reduce screen time or increase break frequency: the 20-20-20 rule is not just a marketing slogan — it is evidence-based advice for reducing digital eye strain.
  • Preservative-free artificial tears: if your eyes feel dry or gritty alongside the twitch, this is likely contributing. Lubricating drops four to six times daily often reduce the spasm.
  • Magnesium glycinate: if your diet is poor or you are under significant stress, ask your physician about checking magnesium levels. Supplementation at therapeutic doses can help.
Patient tip: Keep a simple log for one week: note when the twitching occurs, how much caffeine you consumed, your sleep hours, and screen time. Most people can identify their pattern within days — and fixing it is entirely in their hands.

Medical Treatment Options for Persistent Twitching

When eyelid twitching does not resolve with conservative measures, or when it has a neurological cause, medical treatment is effective.

Botulinum Toxin (Botox) Injections

For benign essential blepharospasm and hemifacial spasm, botulinum toxin injection into the affected muscles is the most effective and widely used treatment. In my practice, I perform these injections in small, carefully placed doses around the orbital rim. Relief typically begins within three to five days and lasts three to four months, after which repeat injections are required. The procedure is well-tolerated, takes under five minutes, and has an excellent safety record when performed by a trained specialist.

Addressing the Underlying Cause

If dry eye is driving the spasm, treating dry eye resolves the twitch — often completely. If glaucoma drops are the culprit, switching to a different class of medication under your specialist’s guidance can help. Allergic conjunctivitis responds to antihistamine drops and allergen avoidance. Tic disorders in children are often managed with watchful waiting and behavioural strategies, with medication only in severe or persistent cases.

Microvascular Decompression (for Hemifacial Spasm)

In hemifacial spasm caused by a blood vessel compressing the facial nerve at its root, neurosurgical microvascular decompression is the only potentially curative option. This is a major decision requiring careful discussion with a neurosurgeon experienced in skull base surgery. Not all patients choose surgery; many are well-managed with regular botulinum toxin injections instead. The choice depends on age, fitness for surgery, response to injections, and the patient’s own priorities.


This article is part of the Dry Eye Hub. Please also read Basics of Dry EyeDry Eye Second Opinion and Dry Eye: A Chronic DiseaseWhy 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

How long does normal eyelid twitching last?

Benign myokymia — the most common type — typically resolves within a few days to three weeks. If it persists beyond six weeks without an obvious trigger (and after addressing sleep, caffeine, and screen time), it is worth having it evaluated. Duration alone is not an emergency indicator, but persistent twitching that disrupts daily life or vision should not be ignored.

Is eyelid twitching a sign of a neurological problem?

In the vast majority of cases, no. Myokymia is a peripheral phenomenon — a spontaneous firing of muscle fibres in the eyelid — and has no neurological significance. However, certain patterns do suggest neurological involvement: twitching that spreads to the face, forces the eye shut, occurs with double vision, follows head trauma, or is accompanied by weakness on one side of the face. These warrant prompt specialist evaluation. A neuro-ophthalmologist is well-placed to distinguish between benign and concerning causes.

Can glaucoma cause or worsen eyelid twitching?

Glaucoma itself does not cause eyelid twitching. However, some glaucoma medications — particularly prostaglandin analogues like latanoprost or bimatoprost — can occasionally cause periorbital irritation or contribute to dry eye, which in turn drives lid spasm. If you have glaucoma and notice twitching that began after starting or changing your eye drops, mention it at your next visit. Do not stop your drops without guidance. See [glaucoma hub] for more on glaucoma management.

What is blepharospasm and how is it different from normal twitching?

Benign essential blepharospasm is a neurological condition — specifically a focal dystonia — in which the brain sends abnormal signals causing involuntary, forceful closure of both eyelids. Unlike the fine flicker of myokymia, blepharospasm involves sustained or repeated spasms that force the eyes shut, often worsened by bright light, fatigue, or stress. It typically affects both eyes and can be significantly disabling. It is not caused by stress alone. Treatment with botulinum toxin injections is highly effective and is the standard of care.

Can I drive if my eye is twitching?

If the twitching is minor and not affecting your vision or your ability to keep your eye open, driving is generally safe. However, if your eye is being forced shut, if you are experiencing episodes of vision blur during the spasm, or if the twitching is causing distraction that impairs your response time, you should not drive until it is assessed. Blepharospasm in particular can be disabling enough to preclude driving and should be evaluated and treated promptly.

Do children get eyelid twitching and should I be worried?

Yes, children do develop eyelid twitching, and in most cases it is a transient tic — a brief, repetitive, involuntary movement that appears spontaneously and often resolves within weeks to months. Transient tic disorders are common in children between five and twelve years of age. Drawing attention to the tic often makes it worse temporarily. However, if the twitching is prolonged (beyond four weeks), spreads to involve other muscle groups, is accompanied by vocalisations, or is associated with behavioural or developmental concerns, a paediatric neurology referral is appropriate. See [children’s eye care hub] for more on eye health in children.


Key Takeaways

  • Most eyelid twitching is benign myokymia — a spontaneous muscle spasm driven by fatigue, caffeine, dry eyes, or stress. It resolves on its own.
  • Twitching that spreads to involve the face, forces the eye shut, or persists beyond six weeks needs specialist evaluation.
  • Blepharospasm and hemifacial spasm are distinct conditions requiring different treatments — botulinum toxin injections are effective for both.
  • Dry eye is an underrecognised driver of eyelid spasm. Treating it often resolves the twitching entirely.
  • Glaucoma drops can occasionally trigger or worsen periorbital irritation. Discuss any change in symptoms with your specialist — do not stop drops unilaterally.
  • Children with persistent or spreading tics should be assessed by a paediatric neurologist, not simply reassured.

Book a Consultation

If your eyelid twitching has lasted more than a few weeks, is affecting your daily life, or is accompanied by any of the warning signs described above, I would encourage you to come in for an assessment. As a neuro-ophthalmology and glaucoma specialist, I am trained to evaluate both the common and the uncommon causes of eyelid twitching — and to offer treatment that goes beyond simple reassurance.

An accurate diagnosis is the starting point for the right treatment. I see patients for second opinions on eyelid and neuro-ophthalmological concerns, and am happy to discuss your specific situation.Book a consultation: Upload your reports for a structured review.| www.drshibalbhartiya.com | +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.

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.

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

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

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Exam Season and Your Child’s Eyes

During exam season, prolonged reading and screen use can cause eye strain, headaches, blurred vision, dry eyes, and difficulty concentrating. Encourage regular breaks, good lighting, adequate sleep, and timely eye examinations to help your child study comfortably and perform at their best.

Every year, as board exams and competitive entrance tests approach, a familiar pattern plays out in homes across India. Children wake earlier, sleep later, and spend hour after hour hunched over textbooks, revision notes, and screens — searching answers, watching explainer videos, solving past papers. Parents watch, worry about marks, and stock up on almonds and Horlicks.

What most parents don’t think about is their child’s eyes.

Exam Season and Your Child’s Eyes: What Every Parent Needs to Know

Eye strain during exam season is not a minor inconvenience. For children who are already spending 8–10 hours a day doing near work — reading, writing, and screen use — the sudden, sustained spike in visual demand during revision months can tip them into real discomfort. In some cases, it can worsen an underlying condition that was never noticed before.

As a glaucoma and neuro-ophthalmology specialist, I see children in clinic every year who were brought in after exams because they started getting headaches, blurring, or simply refused to read. In most cases, the signs were there earlier. The parents just didn’t know what to look for.

This article is for those parents.


Why Exams Are Hard on Children’s Eyes

Near Work and the Visual System

The human eye is designed to see at distance. When we read — whether a book or a screen — the eye has to do something called accommodation: the lens inside the eye changes shape to focus on something close. This is an active, muscular effort. Do it for long enough without a break, and the muscles fatigue. This is called accommodative strain, and it is one of the most common causes of eye-related complaints in school-age children.

During normal school days, children move. They look up from their desks, go to the playground, look out of windows. These are natural visual breaks — moments when the eye relaxes into distance focus and the accommodative muscles recover.

During exam season, that rhythm disappears. Children sit at a desk for four, six, sometimes eight hours at a stretch, switching only between a textbook and a screen. The eyes never get a chance to fully rest.

Screens Add a Different Kind of Strain

Books and screens are not the same as far as the eyes are concerned.

When reading a screen, children blink less — often half as frequently as normal. Blinking is how the eye’s surface is kept moist and refreshed. Reduced blinking means the tear film breaks down, and the surface of the eye becomes dry and irritated. This is digital eye strain, and it compounds the accommodative fatigue from reading.

Screens also emit blue light, which, over prolonged exposure, can contribute to visual fatigue and disrupted sleep — two things exam-season children are already dealing with.

The modern exam-season child does not use books or screens. They use both, for hours at a time, often in poor lighting, often late into the night.

Sleep Deprivation Makes Everything Worse

The eye is not separate from the rest of the body. Poor sleep affects tear production, increases light sensitivity, and slows the visual processing that helps children concentrate and retain what they’re reading. Children who stay up past midnight to study are not just tired the next morning — their visual system is genuinely impaired.

This matters because many children who struggle to concentrate during exams are written off as anxious or underprepared. Sometimes, they simply cannot see clearly, or their eyes are too fatigued to sustain focus.


Signs That Your Child’s Eyes Are Under Stress

Children — especially older ones — often don’t volunteer that their eyes are bothering them. They don’t have the vocabulary for it, or they assume it’s normal, or they’re too focused on studying to stop and notice. Parents need to be the observers.

Watch for:

  • Frequent rubbing of the eyes, especially during or after study sessions
  • Complaints of headache, particularly at the front of the head or behind the eyes, that appear in the afternoon or evening and not in the morning
  • Squinting at the board, textbook, or screen
  • Holding the book very close — closer than the child normally does
  • Tilting the head to one side while reading
  • Avoiding reading or losing interest in revision quickly — this can be visual fatigue, not laziness
  • Watery or red eyes at the end of a study session
  • Blurring that comes and goes — present after reading for a while, then clears after a rest
  • Difficulty reading for more than 20–30 minutes without discomfort

Any one of these, occurring regularly during exam preparation, deserves attention. Several together warrant an eye examination before you assume it is stress or anxiety alone.

Here are some eye exercises to reduce eye strain.


Quick Reference: What Your Child’s Symptoms May Mean

What You SeeWhat It May IndicateWhat To Do
Headache at the forehead or behind eyes, appears in the afternoonAccommodative strain from sustained near workEnforce 20-20-20 breaks; book an eye test if it persists beyond a week
Holds book or phone very close; creeps toward the pageUncorrected or under-corrected myopiaEye examination — do not delay
Tilts head to one side while readingPossible astigmatism or binocular vision issueEye examination with binocular vision assessment
Loses place while reading; re-reads linesConvergence insufficiency or tracking problemSpecifically ask for a binocular vision evaluation, not just a standard refraction
Covers one eye to read or watchIntermittent exotropia or suppressionUrgent eye examination
Avoids reading; loses focus after 15–20 minutesVisual fatigue from undetected hyperopia or binocular dysfunctionEye examination; do not attribute to attention or motivation alone
Eyes water or go red during study sessionsDigital eye strain; reduced blink rateConscious blinking; screen breaks; if persistent, check for dry eye
Blurring that comes and goes; clears after restAccommodative spasm or early myopiaEye examination; cycloplegic refraction may be needed
Sees double, especially when tiredDecompensating phoria under visual stressSame-day or urgent eye examination

If your child has more than two symptoms from this table occurring together, do not wait. An eye examination during exam season, not after, is the right call.

What Can Actually Help: The Practical Guide for Exam Season

The 20-20-20 Rule

This is the single most evidence-based intervention for near-work eye strain, and it costs nothing.

Every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away, for 20 seconds.

Twenty feet is roughly the distance across a medium-sized room — a window, a wall, a tree outside. The goal is to give the accommodative system a genuine break. This is not the same as looking up at the ceiling or closing one’s eyes; it is specifically the act of focusing at distance that allows the eye muscles to relax.

Put a reminder on your child’s phone. Make it non-negotiable.

Lighting Matters More Than Most Parents Realise

Reading in dim light does not damage the eyes, but it does make them work harder and tire faster. The ideal study environment has:

  • Ambient room lighting (not just a desk lamp in a dark room — the contrast between the bright page and the dark surroundings is exhausting for the eyes)
  • A desk lamp positioned to the side rather than directly behind or above, to avoid glare and shadow
  • Natural light where possible during daytime study — not direct sunlight on the page, but general daylight in the room

For screen use, screen brightness should match the room — neither too bright relative to a dark room, nor too dim. Most devices have an auto-brightness setting; use it.

The Correct Reading Distance

Books should be held at roughly 30–40 centimetres from the eyes — approximately elbow to knuckle distance. Closer than this increases the accommodative demand significantly. If a child consistently holds books closer than this, it may indicate that they need glasses or a change in their current prescription.

For screens, 50–60 centimetres is recommended for laptop or desktop monitors.

Posture Is an Eye Issue Too

Children who slouch or hunch forward bring their face closer to the book or screen, increasing near-work strain. Good reading posture — sitting upright, feet flat, book or device at the right distance — is a visual health habit, not just an orthopaedic one. If your child keeps creeping closer to the page despite reminders, that is a sign, not a habit.

Night Study and Screen Use

If your child must study at night:

  • Enable Night Mode or Warm Display on all devices after 8 PM. This reduces blue light and supports natural melatonin production.
  • Dim the screen relative to the lighting in the room.
  • Stop screens 30–45 minutes before sleep if at all possible. This is not just advice for the eyes — it is for the quality of sleep that follows, which affects how much the child actually retains.

Hydration and Blinking

It sounds simple because it is: children who are dehydrated have worse tear film quality and worse eye comfort. During intense study periods, children often forget to drink water. Keep water within reach of the study desk.

Remind your child to consciously blink when using screens. It sounds odd, but prolonged screen use genuinely suppresses the blink reflex. A deliberate full blink every few minutes during screen use helps maintain surface moisture.


When to Take Your Child for an Eye Examination

Exam season is not when most parents think of booking an eye test. But it is often exactly when undiagnosed vision problems declare themselves, because the visual demand suddenly exceeds what a child’s uncorrected or undercorrected vision can manage.

Book an eye examination if:

  • Your child complains of headaches specifically related to reading or screen use
  • They are avoiding reading, or tiring of it unusually quickly
  • You notice squinting, head tilting, or holding material very close
  • Their performance has dropped and there is no clear academic explanation
  • They haven’t had an eye test in the past year

An eye examination takes 30–45 minutes. Finding out that a child needs glasses — or needs a stronger prescription — before or during exam season can make a measurable difference to both comfort and performance.


A Note on Myopia and Exam Season

India is in the middle of a myopia epidemic. Studies show that children in urban India have some of the highest rates of short-sightedness in the world, and rates are rising with every passing year. Intensive near work — exactly the kind that happens during exam preparation — is one of the environmental factors that drives myopia progression in children who are already myopic, and may contribute to its onset in those who are borderline.

If your child has myopia, exam season is a particularly important time to ensure they are using the correct, current prescription — and to build in as much outdoor time as remains possible, since natural light exposure has a well-established protective effect against myopia progression.

You may want to listen to me talking about myopia control.


What Doctors Often Miss

This section is written for parents who have already taken their child to a doctor — and been told everything is fine — but something still feels off.

Standard eye examinations in a busy clinic are designed to answer one question: does this child need glasses, and if so, what prescription? That question gets answered. But it is not the only question worth asking about a child who is struggling visually, especially during periods of intense near work.

Here are the conditions that are routinely missed.

Convergence Insufficiency

Convergence is the ability of both eyes to turn inward together and maintain focus on a near object. It is what allows you to read a line of text without it doubling or blurring. In children with convergence insufficiency, this mechanism is weak — the eyes struggle to work together at close range, and the effort of forcing them to do so is exhausting.

The classic presentation is a child who can read, but not for long. They lose their place, skip lines, re-read sentences, and tire quickly. Some may complain that words “move” or “swim.” They are often told they have attention problems. They may have been assessed for learning difficulties. Their standard eye test comes back normal because convergence is not routinely tested in a basic refraction appointment.

Convergence insufficiency is one of the most underdiagnosed conditions in school-age children. It responds well to targeted treatment — vision therapy and specific convergence exercises — but only if it is actually looked for.

If your child’s reading complaints persist despite a “normal” eye test, specifically ask for a binocular vision assessment.

Latent Hyperopia

Most parents know about myopia (short-sightedness). Fewer know about hyperopia (long-sightedness), and fewer still know about latent hyperopia — the hidden kind.

In young children, the lens of the eye is highly flexible. A child with mild to moderate hyperopia can often compensate by using their accommodative muscles to bring near and far objects into focus. They appear to see normally. A standard vision test may not reveal the underlying problem because the child is actively correcting for it during the test itself.

The cost of this constant compensation is effort. The accommodative system is working continuously — all day, every day — just to maintain normal vision. During exam season, when near-work demand spikes, that system becomes exhausted. The child develops headaches, eye fatigue, and difficulty sustaining reading. They may become irritable. They may seem to “hit a wall” in their ability to study.

The only way to detect latent hyperopia reliably is with a cycloplegic refraction — an eye examination done after eye drops that temporarily paralyse the accommodative muscles, forcing the true refractive error to reveal itself. This is not done routinely. You may need to specifically request it, or ask whether it is indicated.

Intermittent Exotropia

Intermittent exotropia is a condition in which one eye periodically drifts outward — but not all the time. Between episodes, the eyes appear and function normally. The child may be completely unaware it is happening.

Under normal circumstances, the visual system compensates for the drift through effort. When the child is tired — which exam-season children chronically are — that compensation fails. The eye drifts, vision becomes uncomfortable or briefly double, and the child instinctively closes or covers one eye to restore single vision. Parents sometimes notice this; more often they don’t.

Because it is intermittent and compensated most of the time, it is frequently missed on examination. A child seen in clinic who is not tired, not stressed, and not doing prolonged near work may show no sign of it at all.

If you have ever noticed your child covering one eye to read, squinting predominantly in one eye, or complaining of double vision when tired, mention this explicitly at the eye examination. Ask the clinician to assess for intermittent exotropia specifically.

Accommodative Spasm

In some children — particularly those doing very intensive near work — the accommodative system does not simply fatigue. It locks. The lens stays in a near-focused position even when the child tries to look into the distance. This is called accommodative spasm or pseudomyopia.

The child suddenly appears to have become myopic — distance vision blurs. They may be prescribed glasses for myopia that they do not actually have, or prescribed a stronger prescription than they need. The underlying cause — a cramped, overworked accommodative system — goes unaddressed.

This is more common than most parents realise, particularly in children who have had a sudden, significant increase in study hours. The treatment is rest, appropriate breaks, and in some cases cycloplegic eye drops — not a stronger glasses prescription.

If your child’s myopia has suddenly worsened during exam season, or if they were prescribed glasses for the first time immediately after a period of intense studying, a cycloplegic refraction to confirm the true prescription is worth discussing with their ophthalmologist.

The Child Labelled “Lazy” or “Inattentive”

This deserves its own mention because it is, in my clinical experience, the most consequential missed diagnosis of all.

A child who cannot sustain reading for more than twenty minutes, who loses focus repeatedly, who avoids revision, who seems disengaged — is often labelled as not trying hard enough. In some cases, particularly when exam performance is disappointing despite apparent effort, a learning disability or attention disorder is suspected.

Before that conclusion is reached, the child’s binocular vision should be comprehensively assessed. Convergence insufficiency, undetected hyperopia, and tracking problems all produce exactly this picture. They are treatable. The child labelled lazy who actually has a binocular vision disorder does not need motivation — they need an ophthalmologist who looks beyond the refraction.


This article is a part of the Paediatric Ophthalmology Hub. Please also read Children’s Eye Care, Nutrition, Are Children’s Eyes More Vulnerable, Lazy Eye, and Myopia Prevention in Children. Eye Care Tips for Screen Use, and 7 Ways to Take Care of Your Child’s Eye Health also may be of interest.

You may want to see some eye care tips for children here, here, and here.


Frequently Asked Questions

Q: My child wears glasses. Do they need to wear them while reading?

It depends on their prescription. Children with myopia (short-sightedness) may or may not need their glasses for close reading — their optometrist or ophthalmologist will advise. Children with hyperopia (long-sightedness) or astigmatism almost certainly do. Do not assume; ask.

Q: Are blue light glasses worth buying for exam season?

The evidence for blue light blocking glasses as a treatment for eye strain is currently limited. The more effective intervention is the 20-20-20 rule and reducing screen time after dark. If your child already wears glasses, a blue-light coating does no harm and may help. It is not a substitute for good study habits.

Q: My child says their eyes are fine. Should I still be concerned?

Children often do not recognise that their visual discomfort is abnormal. If you are observing the signs listed in this article, trust your observation over your child’s self-report.

Q: Can eye strain during exams cause permanent damage?

Eye strain itself is not a cause of permanent damage. However, undiagnosed refractive errors (the need for glasses) can worsen if uncorrected, and myopia can progress. The concern is not that studying will injure the eyes, but that an underlying issue, now stressed, will go unaddressed.

Q: How much screen time is too much during exam season?

There is no precise number, because children vary. What matters more than total time is whether breaks are taken, whether lighting is correct, and whether the child is symptomatic. A child who takes 20-20-20 breaks, studies in good lighting, and sleeps adequately will tolerate more screen time than one who does none of these things.


The Bottom Line

Exam season is a period of genuine visual stress for children. The combination of prolonged near work — books, revision papers, and screens — in often poor conditions, with disrupted sleep and reduced outdoor time, is a real challenge for the developing visual system.

Most of what helps is simple: breaks, good lighting, the right distance, adequate sleep, and an eye examination if symptoms appear.

What parents can do is watch, ask, and not dismiss eye-related complaints as exam nerves. Sometimes the child who cannot concentrate at their desk is not distracted. They are struggling to see, or struggling to keep their eyes comfortable long enough to work.

That is a problem with a solution. And it starts with paying attention.


Dr. Shibal Bhartiya is a fellowship-trained glaucoma and neuro-ophthalmology specialist and Clinical Director of Ophthalmology at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram. She is founder of Vision Unlimited, a community eye health organisation serving children across underserved communities in India.

For appointments: Book a Consultation | For queries: +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.

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

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

Glaucoma and Headaches

Acute and intermittent angle closure glaucoma can present with severe headache, nausea, vomiting, and coloured haloes around lights — symptoms so closely overlapping with migraine that patients spend years in neurology before anyone examines their drainage angles. A gonioscope placed at a routine eye examination can reveal in minutes what years of migraine treatment cannot resolve.

For patients with narrow angles, a laser peripheral iridotomy, a five-minute outpatient procedure — may eliminate the trigger entirely. The eye and the head are not separate systems.

Dr 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.


Seven Years of Migraines That Disappeared After a Routine Eye Examination

She was in her late forties or early fifties. She had no eye complaints.

It was a routine check — glasses, perhaps a small change in power. I noticed a shallow anterior chamber, explained she needed a gonioscopy. Asked her if she had experienced any headaches, or coloured haloes around lightbulbs.

She talked. She had been living with migraines for seven to eight years. Treatment after treatment. Specialist after specialist. The headaches kept coming.

If you are reading this after years of treatment that has not worked, I want you to know: that exhaustion is real, and it is not in your head. But the answer sometimes is — in your eyes.

I looked at her angles. They were narrow. Both eyes.


What a gonioscope found that years of migraine treatment missed

I placed a gonioscope, a contact lens with a mirror that allows direct visualisation of the eye’s drainage angle, and examined both eyes carefully. She had primary angle closure. Peripheral anterior synechiae were present in roughly a quadrant of each eye — meaning parts of the drainage angle had already begun to stick shut. Her IOP was in the range of 22 to 24 mmHg.

A standard migraine workup does not include a gonioscope. A glaucoma specialist examination does.


Why angle closure symptoms feel exactly like a migraine

In intermittent angle closure, the drainage angle narrows and blocks without fully closing. Pressure builds, then releases. The episode passes. No one connects it to the eye.

During these episodes, the symptoms are: severe throbbing headache, nausea, vomiting, coloured haloes around lights and streetlamps, eye redness, and a deep ache around the orbit. These are textbook migraine symptoms. They are also textbook intermittent angle closure symptoms. Without a gonioscope, there is no way to tell them apart from a history alone.


If your migraines have not responded to treatment, or if your headaches come with coloured halos or eye pain, a glaucoma specialist examination may give you answers years of headache treatment have not.

Book a consultation with Dr Shibal Bhartiya in Gurgaon. Second opinions welcome.
+91 88826 38735 | www.drshibalbhartiya.com


Symptoms, Causes, and When to Worry

SymptomLikely CauseWhen to Worry
Severe throbbing headacheIntermittent IOP spike from narrow anglesAttacks are recurring, not relieved by migraine medication
Nausea and vomiting with headacheAcute pressure rise, vagal responseAccompanying eye redness or blurred vision
Coloured halos around lightsCorneal oedema from raised IOPAny episode with halos warrants urgent eye evaluation
Eye ache or pain around orbitElevated intraocular pressurePersists beyond the headache episode
Blurred vision during headacheRaised IOP affecting corneal clarityVision does not fully recover after episode
Headache worse in dim light or eveningPupil dilation narrows angles furtherConsistent pattern linked to lighting conditions

What Doctors Often Miss

Neurologists and general physicians are not trained to examine drainage angles. That is not a criticism — it is a structural gap. A gonioscope is a specialist instrument used by ophthalmologists and glaucoma specialists. It is not part of a standard headache workup, and it is not part of most routine optometry checks either.

The result is that intermittent angle closure goes undiagnosed for years in patients who are otherwise receiving excellent neurological care. The migraine label is applied because the symptoms fit. The eye is never examined. The pressure spikes continue.

If you have been diagnosed with migraines and you have never had your angles examined, that is worth a second opinion from a glaucoma specialist.

The other missed signal is coloured halos. Many patients mention them. Fewer doctors follow up specifically on the eye examination that halos warrant.


A five-minute laser. Ten migraine-free years.

We performed a laser peripheral iridotomy — a small opening in the iris, made with a laser, in the clinic, in under ten minutes. It allows aqueous fluid to flow freely, relieves intermittent pressure build-up, and eliminates the trigger that narrow angles create.

That was ten years ago.

She has not had a single migraine attack since.

An occasional headache, she tells me — but she has her own explanation for those. “Those are because of who I am married to,” she said.

Whether the angle closure was the direct cause of her migraines or a powerful intermittent trigger, the outcome speaks for itself. A gonioscope at a routine eye check gave her back ten years of her life.


What This Means for You

Narrow angles produce no symptoms between episodes. An eye that looks entirely normal — good vision, no redness, no pain — can have drainage angles that are quietly narrowing with every passing year.

The only way to know is an examination that includes gonioscopy. If you have recurring headaches that have not responded to treatment, if your headaches come with coloured halos or eye pain, or if you have a family history of glaucoma, angle closure, or are significantly long-sighted — ask your eye doctor specifically whether your angles have been examined.

A laser peripheral iridotomy takes ten minutes. The benefit, as one patient told me a decade later, can last a lifetime.


FAQs

Can narrow angles or angle closure actually cause migraines?

Narrow angles cause intermittent spikes in eye pressure. These spikes produce headache, nausea, vomiting, eye pain, and coloured haloes — symptoms that overlap significantly with migraine. Whether angle closure directly causes migraines or acts as a powerful intermittent trigger remains an open clinical question. What is well-documented is that some patients with long-standing treatment-resistant headaches find complete or substantial relief after laser iridotomy.

How do angle closure symptoms mimic a migraine attack?

The overlap is striking and clinically important. Acute or intermittent angle closure can cause severe throbbing headache, nausea and vomiting, coloured haloes around lights and streetlamps, eye redness, blurred vision, and a dull ache around the eye socket. Many patients — and sometimes their doctors — attribute these episodes to migraine, tension headache, or stress for years. The eye is rarely examined. A gonioscope at one routine visit can change everything.

What are coloured haloes and why do they appear in angle closure?

When eye pressure rises suddenly, fluid accumulates in the cornea. This causes light to scatter as it enters the eye, producing rainbow-coloured rings around light sources — bulbs, headlights, streetlamps. Coloured haloes are a warning sign. They warrant an urgent eye evaluation, not just a change in glasses. If your headaches come with haloes around lights, tell your eye doctor specifically.

What is a laser peripheral iridotomy and is it a major procedure?

It is a minor outpatient laser procedure done in the clinic, usually in under ten minutes. A small opening is created in the iris to allow fluid to drain freely and relieve the pressure build-up caused by narrow angles. There is no incision, no hospitalisation, and no general anaesthesia. Most patients resume normal activity the same day.

Who should be screened for narrow angles?

Anyone with a family history of angle closure glaucoma, anyone of East or South Asian descent, anyone who is significantly long-sighted (hypermetropic), and anyone over 40 with unexplained recurrent headaches, eye ache, or coloured haloes around lights. Narrow angles cause no symptoms until a pressure spike begins — and by then, some damage may already have occurred.

Can treating narrow angles prevent glaucoma entirely?

In many cases, yes. A timely laser iridotomy in a patient with primary angle closure — before significant optic nerve or drainage angle damage — can halt the glaucoma disease process entirely. This is why early detection matters. The laser takes minutes. The benefit can last a lifetime.


This page is part of the Advanced Glaucoma Care hub. Read about the full spectrum of glaucoma diagnosis and treatment. Please also read about Laser Treatments for Glaucoma, Narrow Angles and Gonioscopy.

You may want to watch this podcast I did several years ago, for Health Talks.


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.

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.

1,500+ Five Star Patient Reviews — Google Business Profile

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