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65% of Americans Experience Eye Strain

Eye Strain Relief That Actually Works

Tired eyes, headaches, and blurred vision are not something you have to live with. Our eye strain specialists identify the root cause of your discomfort — whether it is screen fatigue, an outdated prescription, dry eyes, or binocular vision dysfunction — and deliver targeted treatment that provides lasting relief.

The Scale of the Problem

Digital Eye Strain Affects 7 in 10 Screen Users

Roughly 69% of the world's digital device users experience digital eye strain (DES), yet the majority never discuss their symptoms with an eye care professional. This is one of the largest unaddressed public health issues of the screen age.

69%

of device users worldwide report digital eye strain symptoms

Ccami-Bernal et al., 2024 — 103 studies, 66,577 participants

$151B

annual cost of unmanaged screen time in the U.S.

AOA & Deloitte Economics Institute, 2024

68%

of DES sufferers have an underlying binocular vision problem

Yammouni & Evans, 2021 — Journal of Optometry

60%

of adults have never discussed DES symptoms with an eye doctor

CooperVision Survey, 2024

Standard Eye Exams Miss the Root Cause

A general eye exam by an optometrist or ophthalmologist focuses on visual acuity (the 20/20 line), refractive error, and ocular health screening for conditions like glaucoma and cataracts.

What it typically does not include: near point of convergence testing, fusional vergence ranges, accommodative amplitude and facility, vergence facility, or fixation disparity testing — the exact tests needed to diagnose binocular vision disorders.

This creates a massive detection gap. In a landmark study, 100% of binocular vision cases in 920 schoolchildren were previously unidentified despite having had standard eye exams (Hussaindeen et al., BAND Study).

What Standard Exams Test

  • Distance visual acuity (20/20 chart)
  • Refractive error (glasses Rx)
  • Eye pressure, retina, optic nerve

What They Usually Skip

  • Near point of convergence
  • Fusional vergence ranges
  • Accommodative facility
  • Fixation disparity / eye alignment

Our comprehensive eye strain evaluation includes all of these tests — which is how we catch what other exams miss.

104 million

U.S. adults spend 7+ hrs/day on screens

80%

of U.S. adults reported at least one DES symptom in the past 30 days (Vision Council, 2022)

$45.5B

in productivity could be recovered with annual comprehensive eye exams (AOA/Deloitte)

Recognize the Signs

Signs You Are Experiencing Eye Strain

Eye strain (clinically called asthenopia) produces a cluster of symptoms that many people dismiss as normal fatigue. If any of these feel familiar, your eyes are working harder than they should be.

Tired, heavy, or sore eyes

Headaches behind or around the eyes

Blurred or fluctuating vision

Dry, burning, or watery eyes

Neck, shoulder, and back pain

Increased light sensitivity

Difficulty focusing after screen time

Eye twitching or spasms

Understanding the Root Cause

What Causes Eye Strain?

Eye strain is rarely caused by one thing alone. Our doctors evaluate every factor so treatment addresses the real problem — not just the symptoms.

Digital Screens

The average American spends over 7 hours per day on screens. Your eyes blink 66% less while staring at a screen, drying out the tear film and forcing the focusing muscles to sustain close-range effort for hours.

Try the 20-20-20 rule: every 20 minutes, look 20 feet away for 20 seconds.

Uncorrected Vision

Even a mild uncorrected prescription forces your eye muscles to compensate constantly. Astigmatism, early presbyopia (age-related focusing loss), and outdated prescriptions are among the most common — and most treatable — causes of chronic eye strain.

Poor Lighting

Working in lighting that is too dim, too bright, or produces glare forces your pupils and focusing system to constantly readjust. Overhead fluorescent lights and uncovered windows behind your monitor are frequent culprits.

Dry Eye Disease

A compromised tear film scatters light irregularly across the cornea, causing blurred vision and irritation that mimics — and amplifies — eye strain. Air conditioning, heating, and ceiling fans worsen the problem significantly.

Binocular Vision Dysfunction

When your eyes are slightly misaligned, the muscles must constantly strain to fuse images into one. This triggers the trigeminal nerve, causing headaches, neck pain, and fatigue that standard glasses cannot fix.

Learn about Neurolens treatment

Extended Near Work

Reading, studying, sewing, and other close-up tasks demand sustained accommodation (focusing effort). After age 35, the lens becomes less flexible, making near work increasingly fatiguing — a condition called presbyopia.

The Hidden Cause

Trigeminal Dysphoria: Why Eye Strain Won't Go Away

When rest, screen breaks, and new glasses fail to resolve your symptoms, the cause may be a neurological condition called Visually Induced Trigeminal Dysphoria — a measurable eye misalignment that standard exams miss.

What Is Trigeminal Dysphoria?

Visually Induced Trigeminal Dysphoria is a condition where slight misalignment between the eyes forces the extraocular muscles to constantly compensate. This overexertion sends pain signals through the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal nerve — the same nerve responsible for sensation in the eyes, head, and neck.

Unlike simple eye fatigue, trigeminal dysphoria produces persistent symptoms that do NOT resolve with rest, screen breaks, or new glasses. The symptoms return because the underlying misalignment remains.

The misalignment can be as small as 0.10 prism diopters — completely undetectable in a standard eye exam.

How It Happens

1

Eyes are slightly misaligned at distance, near, or both

2

Extraocular muscles strain constantly to fuse images into one

3

Proprioceptive fibers in the eye muscles send signals through the trigeminal nerve

4

The trigeminal nerve becomes overstimulated (dysphoria)

5

Pain radiates to the eyes, temples, forehead, neck, and shoulders

Signs It's Trigeminal Dysphoria — Not Just Eye Strain

Headaches that worsen with screen use or reading (not migraines)

Neck and shoulder tension that follows a day of visual tasks

Eyes that feel strained even with the correct prescription

Dizziness or motion sensitivity in busy visual environments

Dry eye sensation that doesn’t fully respond to drops

Clinical Evidence

81.6%

of 186 chronic daily headache patients reported positive response after 90 days with contoured prism lenses

54%

of patients with severe headaches reported symptoms substantially reduced or completely eliminated

195

patients across 10 practices in a 2024 double-masked randomized crossover trial showed statistically significant quality-of-life improvement

Diagnosis & Treatment

Measurement

The Neurolens Measurement Device (NMD2) detects misalignments as small as 0.10 prism diopters using over 10,000 data points per measurement — far beyond what a cover test or phoropter can detect.

Correction

Neurolens contoured prism lenses provide varying amounts of prism from distance to near in a single lens — unlike standard prism, which applies the same correction everywhere. This mirrors how misalignment changes at different viewing distances.

Proven Solutions

How We Treat Eye Strain

Our approach starts with a thorough diagnostic evaluation to identify every contributing factor. Then we build a personalized treatment plan that delivers real, lasting relief.

Updated Prescription

A comprehensive refraction ensures your lenses correct for your exact working distances — not just the 20-foot chart. We optimize for computer distance, reading distance, and driving.

Neurolens for Misalignment

If binocular vision testing detects eye misalignment, Neurolens contoured prism lenses correct the problem at its source — reducing headaches and strain by up to 93%.

Learn more

Digital Lens Coatings

Anti-reflective coatings reduce glare from screens and overhead lighting. Blue-light-filtering options can improve comfort during extended screen sessions, especially in the evening.

Dry Eye Treatment

If reduced blinking or meibomian gland dysfunction is drying your eyes, we treat the tear film directly with in-office therapies, prescription drops, or environmental modifications.

Learn more

Ergonomic Guidance

Screen position, chair height, lighting angle, and ambient humidity all affect eye comfort. We provide specific, personalized workspace recommendations based on your daily routine.

Vision Therapy

For focusing and convergence weakness, guided exercises strengthen the eye muscles and improve stamina. Particularly effective for children and young adults with accommodative insufficiency.

Practical Guidance

Daily Habits That Reduce Eye Strain

While professional treatment addresses the root cause, these evidence-based habits help minimize daily strain on your visual system.

The 20-20-20 Rule

Every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for at least 20 seconds. This relaxes the ciliary muscle that contracts during close-range focus and helps reset your focusing system.

Screen Position

Place your monitor at arm's length (about 25 inches) with the top of the screen at or slightly below eye level. This reduces the demand on your focusing and convergence systems.

Blink Consciously

Screen use reduces your blink rate by up to 66%. Incomplete blinks leave the cornea exposed, accelerating tear evaporation. Practice full, deliberate blinks every few minutes.

Lighting Control

Avoid glare by positioning your monitor perpendicular to windows, not facing them. Use adjustable task lighting rather than overhead fluorescents. Match screen brightness to your surroundings.

Omega-3 & Hydration

Omega-3 fatty acids (fish oil or flaxseed) support meibomian gland function and tear film stability. Staying well-hydrated helps maintain tear volume, especially in air-conditioned environments.

Annual Eye Exams

If you spend 6 or more hours per day on screens, annual comprehensive exams catch prescription drift, early dry eye, and binocular vision issues before they cause chronic discomfort.

Important

When Eye Strain Needs Professional Care

While occasional eye strain after a long day is normal, these warning signs indicate you should see an eye doctor rather than relying on home remedies alone.

Eye strain that persists after a full night of rest

Headaches occurring 3 or more times per week

Blurred vision that does not clear with blinking

Noticeable worsening over weeks or months

Difficulty performing your job due to visual discomfort

New onset of double vision at any distance

Eye pain (not just discomfort) during normal tasks

Eye strain despite wearing current prescription glasses

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About Eye Strain

How do I know if I have eye strain or something more serious?
Eye strain typically causes symptoms like tired eyes, headaches, blurred vision, and neck pain that worsen with prolonged visual tasks and improve with rest. If you experience sudden vision changes, severe eye pain, flashing lights, floaters, or symptoms that persist after resting your eyes for 24 hours, you should see an eye doctor promptly. A comprehensive eye exam can rule out underlying conditions like glaucoma, dry eye disease, or binocular vision dysfunction.
Does the 20-20-20 rule actually work for eye strain?
Yes, the 20-20-20 rule is clinically supported: every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for at least 20 seconds. This works because it relaxes the ciliary muscle inside your eye, which contracts to focus on near objects. However, if you follow this rule consistently and still experience eye strain, the cause may be an uncorrected prescription, binocular vision dysfunction, or dry eye disease — all of which require professional treatment.
Can eye strain cause permanent damage to my eyes?
Eye strain itself does not cause permanent damage to the eyes or vision. However, the underlying cause of your eye strain — such as an outdated prescription, untreated dry eye, or binocular vision dysfunction — can worsen over time without treatment. Chronic eye strain also significantly reduces your quality of life, productivity, and comfort. Treating the root cause provides lasting relief and prevents symptom escalation.
Why do my eyes feel worse with new glasses?
New glasses can temporarily cause eye strain during the adaptation period, especially with progressive lenses or significant prescription changes. This usually resolves within 1-2 weeks. However, if discomfort persists beyond two weeks, your prescription may need adjustment, the lens measurements may be off, or you may have an undetected binocular vision issue. Our doctors can perform a binocular vision assessment to determine if specialized lenses like Neurolens would be more effective.
What is the best treatment for computer eye strain?
The most effective treatment depends on the root cause. We start with a comprehensive eye exam including binocular vision testing. Treatment may include an updated prescription optimized for your working distance, blue-light-filtering or anti-fatigue lens coatings, dry eye therapy if your tear film is compromised, or Neurolens contoured prism lenses if eye misalignment is detected. Ergonomic adjustments — monitor at arm's length, screen slightly below eye level, proper lighting — complement clinical treatment.
How often should I get my eyes checked if I use screens all day?
Adults who spend 6 or more hours per day on digital devices should have a comprehensive eye exam at least once a year. Screen-intensive work accelerates changes in focusing ability (especially after age 35) and can mask emerging conditions like early presbyopia or dry eye disease. Annual exams catch these changes early, before they cause chronic discomfort. If you already experience frequent headaches or eye strain, schedule an exam sooner rather than waiting.
Can children get eye strain from screens?
Yes. Children are particularly susceptible to digital eye strain because they often hold devices closer to their faces and have less awareness of symptoms. Signs include frequent eye rubbing, complaints of tired eyes, headaches after screen time, and avoidance of reading or homework. The American Academy of Ophthalmology recommends limiting recreational screen time and encouraging outdoor activity. A pediatric eye exam can identify focusing problems or prescriptions that make screen use harder than it needs to be.

Stop Living With Eye Strain

Whether your eye strain comes from screens, an outdated prescription, dry eyes, or an alignment issue you have never been tested for — we find the cause and fix it. Most patients feel noticeably better within their first week of treatment.

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