Understanding what floaters are in your eyes
As you get older, many parts of your body are going to be operating at a lower efficiency, and your eyes are no exception to this rule. As they get older, more complications and issues are liable to occur, and having floaters appear in your vision is but one example of this. You might be wondering just what exactly floaters are and just what exactly causes them to appear in your vision in the first place. You also might be wondering just why this is a terrible sign for the condition of your eyes and why you should have something done to treat it.
Causes
As mentioned before, the prime cause for floaters appearing in your eyes is mostly due to advanced age. As your age comes to the older stages, the vitreous part of your eyes will become older as well, along with becoming stringier and saggier. Eventually, these stringy parts of your vitreous begin to overtake and begin to cover and fill your eye, coating your vision with this stringy and jelly-like substance. There are other methods through which you can gain this condition besides old age, such as inflammation at the back of your eye, which is where the vitreous is located, causing it to rupture and release its stringy substance to the front your eye. Other conditions include a torn retina and/or a bleeding eye.
Symptoms
With the causes straightened out, let’s go over just what exactly happens when you contract this condition. The center of your condition revolves around the stringy parts of the vitreous to cover your eyes and thus cover your vision which can be seen as specks that aimlessly float around. They will, however, tend to move out of your vision when you try to look at them and sometimes can drift out of your sight entirely on their own.
Medical Attention
Just because you see a few of these floaters doesn’t mean that the condition of your eyes could be in a bad state, as it isn’t entirely unnatural for a few stray strings to come undone. However, should this change, and if a large and new set of floaters show up in your sight, then getting medical attention should definitely be a priority. If you allow this to continue, then you may have a more serious condition such as a torn muscle or another wound in your eye that you may not be aware of. Also, if floaters show up, then you might find your peripheral vision outright blocked by the mass of them showing up.
Conclusion
When it comes to having floaters, it’s usually not the floaters themselves that you should be concerned with unless they start blocking up your vision. Rather its what causes the floaters to show up in the first place that should be a large topic of concern since anything that could disrupt or degrade the condition of your