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Floaters in my eyes

(41 Posts)
Babs03 Mon 24-Mar-25 21:33:58

Have had floaters in my eyes for years, my eyes were checked out when I first started getting them and several times since, at the eye clinic and the opticians, have been told there is nothing that can be done about them. I try to ignore them most of the time but they can be a real bugger sometimes and do impair my vision. Has anyone else got them and have they tried to reduce floaters, if so would be grateful for any advice.
Thanks.

JakeysGranny Wed 02-Apr-25 11:01:12

I was glad I found this topic today on here after scaring myself silly using Dr Google! I’ve had small floaters for years which seem to bother me for a while then I stop noticing them. But 2 days ago I thought I had a mark on my glasses, turns out to be a new slightly bigger almost circular floater which is driving me mad, if you think of staring at a clock face it’s at about “1 o’clock” so right in my field on vision 😳 I’m not due an eye test until July 🤞

FranR0618 Thu 27-Mar-25 14:51:07

Usually they're due to a vitreous detachment & they're why I don't drive at night. They're a normal part of aging & can't be fixed. However, if you see flashing lights or something like a curtain covering part of your visual field, call an eye doctor immediately. Those are signs of a retinal detachment, which is serious & requires surgery asap.

Babs03 Wed 26-Mar-25 07:46:21

Some great replies, thanks to everyone, and keep them coming if anyone else suffers with this, is good to know we are not alone.
🌺🙏🏾

Catterygirl Wed 26-Mar-25 00:43:48

As I mentioned earlier I experienced about 50 floaters after my first cataract removal. At my final discharge over a year later the consultant who did the operation told me that the occasional floaters I still experience very occasionally may be due to staring at white walls. Our rental property only has white walls. I hope this might help others. I have found closing the affected eye for five minutes helps. The floater is still visible when the eye is closed but after some rest disappears. I feel blessed I had such good advice from people who trained for 14 years.

LadyGracie Tue 25-Mar-25 20:16:03

No I’m not your horrible landlady Etoile2701. I took my name from my ‘posh’ cat, a blue British Shorthair called Gracie.

My floaters are also visible when my eyes are photographed at the opticians. As for seeing a consultant again, as I live in Wales I think I would have a very long wait.

DH is having treatment for glaucoma he last saw the consultant on April 30th 2024 and was given a new prescription and was advised he would be seen in 12 weeks. He’s still waiting despite numerous phone calls to the hospital.

MaggsMcG Tue 25-Mar-25 17:56:55

I saw a video somewhere on Social media suggesting rolling your eyes round in a circle. I was very sceptical about it but i tried it and it seemed to work for me. No to get rid of them but to get my brain to ignore most of them. I only notice them if I'm tired now. I've had them for around 15 years or more, I'm 73 soon.

Etoile2701 Tue 25-Mar-25 17:45:29

Oh my goodness. We had a horrible landlady called Lady Gracey when we were first married in 1971. I hope you are not her. But if you are you must be at least 100 years old by now.

missdeke Tue 25-Mar-25 15:42:15

Floaters are a symptom of PVD but they can be present without PVD. But it is possible to have laser surgery to break up the floaters so they are less noticeable if you find them particularly distressing.

Mirren Tue 25-Mar-25 14:15:01

I've had them all my life. I'm a " high myope " ie extremely short sighted and this seems linked.
They are debris floating in the vitreous humour..the gel in our eyeball. They come and go and are big ,small and different shapes.
There's not a jot you can do about them.
I rather enjoy mine. In moments of boredom I can focus on them and chase them around!

knspol Tue 25-Mar-25 13:25:22

I had a sudden vitreous detachment when out shopping with GD several yrs ago, thought I'd got a detached retina and was really worried, accompanied by vision disturbances and pain. Eye hospital told me nothing to worry about but have since had floaters which have increased steadily over the years. Not as bad as some of you seem to have but often do a double take as I think there's a spider or something hanging next to me but just another floater.

Babs03 Tue 25-Mar-25 12:28:14

@Juno56 yes thanks for the warning, when I first had a sudden increase in floaters and flashing lights I went to hospital but the eye clinic said was just a slight bleed at the back of my eye and some detached vitreous, none of which was a concern. But I was told to be aware of a retinal detachment.
Sorry this happened to you 🌺🙏🏾

Juno56 Tue 25-Mar-25 11:51:58

I too had floaters about six years ago and consulted the minor eye conditions service at my local Specsavers. The lace-like floaters were incessant and I asked for a referral to the Eye Hospital. However, he told me that it was nothing to worry about and happened with age; absolutely true in the majority of cases. The floaters continued and increased accompanied by weird flickers but I adjusted. Then about three months later I had what I thought was a particularly large black floater moving across my left eye. It wasn't a floater but my retina detaching. By the time I got to hospital it was completely detached and I couldn't see anything. I had an operation to reattach it but unfortunately over the next year it detached several more times and I now have no useful vision in that eye. The floaters in my right eye have reduced considerably.
I don't relate my experience to frighten anyone, because in the vast majority of cases floaters are a perfectly normal part of our bodies aging. However I strongly urge you, if they increase and particularly if you experience flickers or flashes of light to consult the Ophthalmology department at a hospital rather than an optician.

Frugola Tue 25-Mar-25 11:38:55

I too have suffered from floaters for years. Am around age 80 now, I find them most irritating when using the computer screen ( the bright frontal light).

My doctor shrugs and tells me to drink more liquids. Am trying to up my daily amount.

theworriedwell Tue 25-Mar-25 11:05:47

karmalady

I have had a few floaters all my life but had a big download in 2012. The optician said that I should get in touch with him if it happens again, he is good, very thorough specsavers.

It was disappointing to realise that I would not ever have clear vision again but believe me you do get used to them and the brain adapts. At first for weeks and weeks I let my glasses get dirty, so the floaters would not be so annoying

They do get absorbed slightly but never disappear. People with myopia are prone to floaters but anyone can get them

I had a sudden outbreak of floaters accompanied by flashing lights. I was sent to hospital and had lots if tests as they were worried my retina was detaching. Well it all settled and I did have floaters that gradually reduced and they have disappeared. There is hope.

I have very dry eyes andthe Consultant advised me to take flax seeds supplements do maybe that helped.

Silverbrooks Tue 25-Mar-25 11:05:39

I am monitored for posterior vitreous detachment (PVD) if I become dehydrated - the effect of a relapsing and remitting auto-immune condition when my body won’t absorb liquids.

I’m fine at the moment, in remission, but I also get the occasional bout of sciatica. This often needs a short, very low dose of Amitriptyline to relax the nerves. A few days of that drug and I get floaters. I’ve been checked by my optician who says the drug makes the eyes dry which triggers the floaters. I use lubricating drops for a few days until I stop the Amitriptyline after which the floaters disappear. Presumably the eye debris is eventually cleaned up by the lymphatic system.

I mention this in case people are suffering from floaters caused by meds they are taking for other conditions or could benefit from more hydration. Amitriptyline in larger doses is used an anti-depressant so it makes me wonder if there is a link between other drugs of this kind and eye conditions.

Astitchintime Tue 25-Mar-25 11:02:29

I have had floaters for years and they are so bad now the optician can actually point them out on the scan images. They are annoying, particularly when I am looking at something plain and pale in colour but otherwise I try to ignore them.

theworriedwell Tue 25-Mar-25 10:58:57

Catterygirl

After the operation I had roughly 50 floaters. Some the size of butterflies. At the time I thought I would never get my sight back but decided to believe in the specialists at the London Eye Hospital and followed their instructions to the T. One day at the supermarket, around three months later, my husband asked me what I thought of an item on the shelf, I picked it up and read every detail to him. He asked me where are your reading glasses. I told him in my glass case inside my handbag. That was the moment.

What a brilliant outcome.

Babs03 Tue 25-Mar-25 10:51:57

M0nica

It has been so comforting reading all the posts on this thread. I have a lot of floaters and at times I feel as if there is a thin film of water over my eyes and everything is floating.

I knew other people had floaters, and that I have been told I have a lot, but to recognise on this thread descriptions of the way they affect other people, and recognise that I have so many the same problems has been - yes - comforting.

I agree.
When I posted this I didn’t expect many responses, have felt quite alone with it, so is comforting to know others feel the same, even though I really wouldn’t want anyone else to suffer with this.

M0nica Tue 25-Mar-25 10:23:23

It has been so comforting reading all the posts on this thread. I have a lot of floaters and at times I feel as if there is a thin film of water over my eyes and everything is floating.

I knew other people had floaters, and that I have been told I have a lot, but to recognise on this thread descriptions of the way they affect other people, and recognise that I have so many the same problems has been - yes - comforting.

Babs03 Tue 25-Mar-25 09:43:23

I think that darkening lenses or sunglasses definitely help. Light tends to make things worse.

ronib Tue 25-Mar-25 09:39:38

I have spectacles with lenses which automatically darken in the sun and I find that floaters have become less of a nuisance wearing these lenses. My brain doesn’t pick up on them so much but also the floaters are now smaller than in the beginning.

Toetoe Tue 25-Mar-25 09:33:55

Thankyou Oreo and Babs .

karmalady Tue 25-Mar-25 09:33:18

I have had a few floaters all my life but had a big download in 2012. The optician said that I should get in touch with him if it happens again, he is good, very thorough specsavers.

It was disappointing to realise that I would not ever have clear vision again but believe me you do get used to them and the brain adapts. At first for weeks and weeks I let my glasses get dirty, so the floaters would not be so annoying

They do get absorbed slightly but never disappear. People with myopia are prone to floaters but anyone can get them

Charleygirl5 Tue 25-Mar-25 09:32:43

Catterygirl I was offered free treatment for the rest of my life, but for me, the cons outweighed the pros, so I will take my chances. At least I am 81 and not 41 when the decision may have been different.

Babs03 Tue 25-Mar-25 09:28:42

Thanks Oldnproud. That is good news. Can only hope 🤞