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Blurred vision: common causes and when to see a specialist

July 15, 20266 min read
Blurred vision: common causes and when to see a specialist

Blurred vision is the single most common eye complaint I see. Most causes are simple and treatable, but a small number are sight-threatening and need same-day review. This guide walks through the pattern of blur, the likely causes, and what to do next.

Sudden vs gradual

The single most useful question is: did the blur come on **suddenly** (minutes to hours), **quickly** (a few days), or **slowly** (weeks to years)?

Sudden blur in one eye is potentially serious: retinal detachment, vitreous haemorrhage, retinal vein or artery occlusion, wet age-related macular degeneration, optic neuritis or a stroke can all present this way. Attend eye casualty the same day.

Gradual blur in both eyes is almost always a benign, treatable cause: refractive error, cataract, dry eye or presbyopia.

The commonest gradual causes

**Uncorrected refractive error.** By far the commonest cause in UK adults. A change in glasses prescription every 1–2 years is normal from the mid-40s. If your last sight test was more than two years ago, start there.

**Presbyopia.** From around 45 the natural lens loses focusing flexibility, so reading print and phone screens becomes an effort. Correction options range from reading glasses to varifocals to lens replacement surgery.

**Cataract.** Gradual haze, faded colours, glare at night, difficulty reading road signs. Now treatable by day-case cataract surgery with excellent outcomes.

**Dry eye.** Blur that clears with a blink or fluctuates through the day. See our dry eye guide.

**Diabetic eye disease.** Any diabetic with new blur must have a dilated retinal check within days. Blood-sugar swings alone can also cause temporary blur.

**Age-related macular degeneration.** Distortion of straight lines (door frames, window frames) and a central blurred or missing spot. Wet AMD needs urgent intravitreal treatment.

The commonest sudden causes

**Retinal detachment.** Blur preceded by floaters, flashes and a curtain across vision — same-day emergency. Detail in floaters and flashes.

**Vitreous haemorrhage.** Blur, dark cloud or shower of red spots, often in diabetics or after trauma.

**Retinal vein occlusion.** Painless blur in one eye, often on waking, in patients with high blood pressure.

**Optic neuritis.** Blur with pain on eye movement, often in adults under 40 — needs neurology assessment for possible multiple sclerosis.

**Stroke.** Sudden loss of vision on one side, especially with weakness or slurred speech — call 999.

Red flags — same day review

Contact eye casualty or call 111 the same day if blur comes with:

- Sudden onset in one eye

- Flashes, floaters or a shadow across vision

- Eye pain, redness or headache

- Weakness, numbness or slurred speech

- Recent eye surgery or trauma

- Contact lens in a red eye

How the cause is worked out

In a private consultation I would:

- Measure best-corrected acuity

- Perform full refraction

- Examine the anterior segment with a slit lamp

- Perform OCT of the macula and optic nerve

- Dilate to examine the retina

One visit is usually enough to identify the cause and put a plan in place.

Next steps

If your blurred vision has been building for weeks or months, an up-to-date optometry test is the right first step. If it started suddenly, or if an optometrist has spotted a change on OCT, you can book a private consultation or call **020 3137 3237** for a specialist assessment.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need an eye specialist or an optometrist first?
For gradual blur, start with an optometry sight test. For sudden blur, flashes, floaters or eye pain, go straight to eye casualty or call 111.
Can cataract cause blur in both eyes?
Yes — cataract usually affects both eyes but often at slightly different rates. Once glare or reduced acuity affects daily life, surgery is the definitive treatment.
Why is my vision blurry in the morning?
Overnight tear evaporation and mild eyelid inflammation (blepharitis) commonly cause morning blur that clears within minutes of lubricating drops.
Should I worry if my glasses prescription keeps changing?
Small changes every 2 years are normal. Rapid or asymmetric change, especially with glare or haze, can be an early sign of cataract and is worth a specialist opinion.

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