Eye conditions
Eye twitching (myokymia): UK causes and when it needs investigation

Eyelid twitching — medically called myokymia — is one of the commonest reasons people search 'why is my eye twitching' at 3am. It is almost always benign and settles on its own. But a small number of twitches are actually blepharospasm or hemifacial spasm, which behave differently and need specialist review.
Ordinary eyelid myokymia
This is a fine, intermittent flicker in one lower or upper eyelid that comes and goes over days to weeks. It is caused by low-grade over-firing of the orbicularis muscle. Triggers include:
- **Tiredness** — the strongest trigger
- **Caffeine** — often three or more coffees a day
- **Alcohol**
- **Stress**
- **Screen time and dry eye**
- **Low magnesium**
It is not visible to other people, and it does not close the eye. It typically settles within 2–3 weeks of reducing the triggers.
What helps
1. Sleep 7–8 hours consistently
2. Cut caffeine to one cup a day
3. Regular breaks from screens (20–20–20 rule)
4. Preservative-free lubricants if the eye feels dry
5. Consider magnesium-rich foods (nuts, greens, whole grains)
When it is not myokymia
Refer to an eye specialist if the twitch:
- **Fully closes the eye** — this is blepharospasm, which needs botulinum toxin treatment
- **Involves the whole side of the face** including the mouth — this is hemifacial spasm, which requires an MRI to look for vascular loops on the facial nerve
- Persists for more than three months
- Is accompanied by other neurological symptoms — weakness, numbness, drooping
- Is associated with a red or painful eye
Investigation
Simple myokymia needs no tests. Suspected blepharospasm or hemifacial spasm should be reviewed by an ophthalmologist with an oculoplastic or neuro-ophthalmology interest. MRI is the imaging of choice for hemifacial spasm.
Book a consultant-led review
If your twitch is persistent, closes the eye, or spreads to your face, book a consultation with my private practice or call **020 3137 3237**.
Frequently asked questions
- Why does my eye twitch when I'm tired?
- Fatigue increases baseline nerve excitability in the orbicularis muscle. Sleep restores normal firing thresholds and the twitch usually settles.
- Can dry eye cause twitching?
- Yes. A gritty, irritated eye reflexively triggers lid contraction. Treating the dry eye often abolishes the twitch.
- Is eye twitching a sign of MS?
- Very rarely. Isolated eyelid twitching without other symptoms is not MS. New unexplained neurological signs alongside a twitch warrant a proper neurological review.
- Does botox stop eye twitching?
- Botox is a highly effective treatment for true blepharospasm and hemifacial spasm — not for ordinary myokymia, which needs lifestyle measures instead.
Explore more on Eye conditions
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