There are no formal studies on numbers of floaters since it's so subjective and hard to quantitate. Since floaters are related to posterior vitreous detachments which increase with age the number of people with floaters increases with time.
Speaking from my practice and my personal experience I would say that floaters are most noted during the first weeks after they appear and then we start to tune them out.
Overwhelmingly ophthalmologists do not recommend vitrectomies for floaters. The risks are too high. There are some herbal homeopathic medicines sold to reduce floaters, they are useless and a waste of money.
JCH III MD Eye MD
Thank you Dr. for your response and comments.
I commisurate, as I, too, have the floater desease and am not at all thrilled by this concept!
Hi: How did you get over your floaters? This is barb am having a hard time but am finally starting to get used to mine. It just moves with your eye right? This has been tough but how do you get over it? Barb.
I didn't get over the floaters. Anytime I go looking for them (look at the sky or computer screen and move my eyes I see them) I just have learned to tune them out and ignore them.
You can do it too.
JCH III MD
I don't feel it is in everyone's interest to just ignore floaters especially when they become entangled and create a web right in front of your vision. If you have really poor vision to begin with it can hamper your ability to read and drive. I also do bead work and it is almost impossible to see with those entanglements right in my field of vision.
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Hey, by age 50 half the population have harmless aging floaters. There is no medication or laser that gets rid of them and surgery (Vitrectomy) is too dangerous. So what else is there than to try and ignore them?
JCH III MD
Dear Doctor Joch C Hagan III:
I did have a Vitrectomy to get rid of floaters in my right eye and an IOL implant after that. I can see much clearer in that eye and want to have it done to the other eye. You have to have extremely poor vision with floaters to understand how the Vitrectomy improves your vision. The operation only took 1/2 hour to 45 minutes to complete. The only drawback is that you will probably develop a cataract afterwards. I'm 56 years old and if you are healthy otherwise it isn't that dangerous. As with any surgery there is a danger, but people take these risks every day. Where would the gain be in medicine today if patients did nothing and never took the risks to advance it?
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Hi Dr. Just getting back on the message board; thanks for answering my question; guess what no retinal detachment and my retinal specialist said i only have a few normal floaters. None in the right eye; my lesion is healed and i do have a scar tissue from the laser treatment. I wish they had an eye drop for them that you can just go to the store and remove them. I am looking into surgery as i am tired of having them and the scar tissue to look at. I am sorry you have to go through this too Doctor. Mine are affecting my vision.
I feel that floaters differ just as people differ,but telling me to ignore my floaters is like telling me to ignore an elephant in the living room. It is impossible. The good news is my Dr thinks the most bothersome ones that happened during a retinal tear may settle, They looked smaller to him yesterday at my check up,but so far they are the same to me. I find wearing sunglasses helps a lot.
Good luck with yours.
Floaters: what can't be cured must irgnored.
JCH MD
There are other options to ignoring .I know a lady
who elected to take a chance on surgery and is NOW free of those "elephant floaters" That lady told her Dr that she would rather have no sight in that eye than to have her entire visual field covered with them. She had very little vision anyway, therefore she had nothing to loose, Many have had success with laser. For now I am just wearing sunglasses a lot hsum4. That really has helped me not to see them as much.I also enjoy my rooms dimmed somewhat.
My Drs at Mayo Clinic have assured me that research is being done ,and they are very understanding about how bothersome floaters can be.
I thank God for understanding doctors and for the hope they have offered me. :O)
Hi This is Barb again; how can you ignore floaters right in front of you and the swirling kind? I am wearing my sunglasses more and am wearing an eye patch when the swirling gets me crazy; how do you not let them drive you nuts; thanks; sorry that you have them too.
Just get busy and do something else. If you have high anxiety then discuss with your GP or a psychiatrist the use of an antianxiety medication.
JCH MD
Vision must be even worse with an eye patch!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
All I can say is no one knows what another is seeing out of their eyes. Some floaters are not too bad. Some are NOT ignorable no matter how "busy" one gets. No psychiatrist is going to tell me it is all in my mind ,and no medication is going to remove them. Personally , I do not want to live my life on anti anxiety meds. I would rather take a chance on surgery,but that is just how I feel about this topic. We are all entitled to our feelings and opinions.
I am 27 years old and i got mine last year.. Woke up one morning with tons of "sperm" looking floaters in both eyes.. Why would this occur overnite?? I have been to the dR. Had my eyes dialated 2x and they say the retinas look good, no tears or anything. Just wondering if a strain (heavy lifting) can cause floaters.??
I'm a 58 yr old artist and recently I have been noticing floaters in my eyes. They don't bother me too much and I can easily tune them out, but I'm wondering if they might be related to a sinus problem I've developed over the last year. Is there any possible connection? Also, I have occasional flashes of light , like a thin half moon shaped flash that happens on the side of my left eye when I blink. My brother in law, who is also a nurse, said it could be the beginning of retinal detachment. But I just feel it may have something to do with my sinus problem. I'll be having an eye exam soon for sunglasses, and I'm hoping that exam will provide some more info. Thanks for your reply and comments, and thank you for hosting this post!
I forgot to mention that in my 30's I was diagnosed with Von Willebrand's Disease and had quite a hard time recovering from an operation to correct a hernia. My concern is having surgery of any kind, and if I needed eye surgery, would my bleeding problem interfere with the healing process?
Floaters can be different things. Imagine a bowl of transpartent Jello, and inside there is either some debris or tiny specks or "cracks". That stuff is unlikely to get fixed by itself. With age the vitreous gel can get more liquid, and thus floaters arise. In some cases it can be caused by certain eye disease. Theres no remedy (today) for these, and I would think your case should be extreme, and visually imparing, to undergo vitrectomy. Only the ones that settle out of "line of sight" will go away. Your best bet prevention, and to stay healthy avoiding processed foods and other toxins, to keep your eye health. Dont take your eyes for granted.
Ignoring is the best cure for floater's as it cannot be eliminated in a safe way & even if its eliminated, one may become anxious about potential side effects of procedure after that.
Also floater's are harmless and consider it as a life time companion rather than as an enemy.