Disclaimer:
This website is intended to assist with patient education and should not be used as a diagnostic, treatment or prescription service, forum or platform. Always consult your own healthcare practitioner for a more personalised and detailed opinion
We have selected the following expert medical opinion based on its clarity, reliability and accuracy. Credit: Sourced from the MSD Manual, Consumer Version; authored by Dr Christopher J. Brady (see below). Please refer to your own medical practitioner for a final perspective, assessment or evaluation.
Blurred vision is the most common vision symptom. When doctors talk about blurred vision, they typically mean a decrease in sharpness or clarity that has developed gradually. Sudden, complete loss of vision in one or both eyes (blindness) is considered something different.
Blurred vision has four general mechanisms:
Certain disorders can have more than one mechanism. For example, refraction can be impaired by early cataracts or by the reversible lens swelling caused by poorly controlled diabetes.
An Inside Look at the Eye
Some disorders that cause blurred vision are more likely to cause other symptoms that prompt people to seek medical attention, such as eye pain and eye redness (for example, acute corneal disorders such as abrasions, ulcers, herpes simplex keratitis, or herpes zoster ophthalmicus).
The most common causes of blurred vision include:
The following information can help people decide when a doctor's evaluation is needed and help them know what to expect during the evaluation.
In people with blurred vision, certain symptoms and characteristics are cause for concern. They include:
People who have warning signs should usually go to an emergency department right away. People who have a body-wide disorder that sometimes causes retinal damage (for example, diabetes, high blood pressure, or sickle cell disease) should see an eye doctor as soon as is practical, usually within a few days. However, if vision has been deteriorating gradually for months or years but has not been severely impaired and there are no warning signs, waiting a week or longer is usually not harmful.
Eye examinations should be done by an ophthalmologist or optometrist. Ophthalmologists are medical doctors who specialize in the evaluation and treatment (surgical and nonsurgical) of all types of eye disorders. Optometrists are health care practitioners who specialize in the diagnosis and treatment of refractive errors (which are treated by prescribing glasses or contact lenses). However, optometrists can often diagnose certain other eye problems and then refer people to an ophthalmologist for treatment. People should usually see an ophthalmologist if they have warning signs.
Doctors first ask questions about the person's symptoms and medical history. Doctors then do a physical examination. What they find during the history and physical examination often suggests a cause of the blurred vision and the tests that may need to be done (see section: Some Causes and Features of Blurred Vision).
Doctors ask many questions about the person's symptoms because it is important to understand exactly what the person means by blurred vision. For example, people who have actually lost vision in part of their visual field (visual field defect) may describe this sensation only as blurred vision. The presence of other eye symptoms, such as eye redness, sensitivity to light, floaters, a sensation of sudden flashes of light that can look like lightning, spots, or stars (called “photopsias”), and pain at rest or with eye movement, helps doctors determine the cause. Doctors also ask about the effects of darkness (night vision) and bright lights (for example, causing blur, star bursts, or halos) and whether the person wears corrective lenses.
Doctors also ask questions about symptoms of possible causes and about the presence of disorders that are known to be risk factors for eye disorders (for example, high blood pressure, diabetes, HIV infection or AIDS, and sickle cell disease).
Testing visual acuity (sharpness of vision) is the first step. Ideally, acuity is measured while the person stands about 6 meters (20 feet) from a standard eye chart (Snellen chart) posted or projected on a wall. Each eye is measured separately while the other eye is covered. Visual acuity is measured with and without the person's own glasses. Sometimes the doctor has the person look through a device that has a pinhole. This device can usually correct refractive errors almost completely but does not correct vision that is blurred due to other causes.
The eye examination is also important. The doctor carefully examines the entire eye using an ophthalmoscope (a light with magnifying lenses that shines into the back of the eye), slit lamp (an instrument that enables a doctor to examine the eye under high magnification), or both. Often the eyes are dilated for ophthalmoscopy with eye drops. Pressure inside the eye (intraocular pressure) is measured (called tonometry).
Symptoms and findings during the eye examination often help suggest a cause. For example, if visual acuity returns while corrective lenses or a pinhole device is used, and the remainder of the eye exam is normal, simple refractive error is usually the cause of blurring.
Please note: Features include symptoms and the results of the doctor's examination. Features mentioned are typical but not always present.
Cataracts
Corneal scarring after an injury or an infection
Age-related macular degeneration
Retinitis pigmentosa (progressive deterioration of the retina)
Epiretinal membrane
Macular hole
Retinal vein occlusion
Open-angle glaucoma
Optic neuritis (inflammation of the optic nerve), which can be related to multiple sclerosis
Refractive errors (such as nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism)
Astigmatism is an irregularity in the curvature of the cornea or lens. That is, the cornea or lens is curved differently in different directions. This difference causes light traveling in different planes to be focused differently. For example, vertical lines may be in focus when horizontal lines are not (or vice versa). The irregularity can be in any plane, however, and is often different in each eye. A person with astigmatism (each eye should be tested separately) tends to see certain lines more boldly (that is, in better focus) than the others. Astigmatism can be corrected with prescription eyeglasses or contact lenses. It often occurs together with nearsightedness or farsightedness.
The diagram below is of a standard chart used to test for astigmatism in one eye at a time.
Astigmatism
Testing depends on the suspected cause of the blurred vision. People with symptoms of bodywide disorders should have appropriate testing. For example, testing might include blood tests for diabetes, systemic lupus erythematosus, or HIV infection, blood pressure monitoring, and possibly electrocardiography if high blood pressure or a kidney disorder is suspected.
Although some decrease in visual acuity normally occurs with aging, acuity normally is correctable to 20/20 with refraction, even in very old people.
Dr Christopher J. Brady
MD
Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology, Wilmer Eye Institute, Retina Division, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
If so, we invite you to criticise, contribute to or help improve our content. We find that many practicing doctors who regularly communicate with patients develop novel and often highly effective ways to convey complex medical information in a simplified, accurate and compassionate manner.
MedSquirrel is a shared knowledge, collective intelligence digital platform developed to share medical expertise between doctors and patients. We support collaboration, as opposed to competition, between all members of the healthcare profession and are striving towards the provision of peer reviewed, accurate and simplified medical information to patients. Please share your unique communication style, experience and insights with a wider audience of patients, as well as your colleagues, by contributing to our digital platform.
Your contribution will be credited to you and your name, practice and field of interest will be made visible to the world. (Contact us via the orange feed-back button on the right).