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  2. Eye floaters - Symptoms and causes - Mayo Clinic

    www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/eye...

    Most eye floaters are caused by age-related changes that occur as the jelly-like substance (vitreous) inside your eyes liquifies and contracts. Scattered clumps of collagen fibers form within the vitreous and can cast tiny shadows on your retina.

  3. Eye Floaters: Causes, Symptoms & How to Get Rid of Them

    www.visioncenter.org/conditions/eye-floaters

    6 Causes of Eye Floaters . Common factors contributing to eye floaters include: aging, eye infection, bleeding in the eye, cataract surgery, eye medication, and myopia (nearsightedness). 1. Aging. The vitreous changes properties as you age. It liquefies and compresses with time, causing it to pull away from the inside of the eyeball.

  4. Eye Floaters: Causes, Symptoms, and Treatment - WebMD

    www.webmd.com/eye-health/benign-eye-floaters

    What Causes Eye Floaters? Most floaters are tiny flecks of a protein called collagen. They’re part of a gel-like substance in the back of your eye called the vitreous.

  5. Eye Floaters: What They Are, Causes & Treatment

    my.clevelandclinic.org/health/symptoms/14209-eye...

    Eye floaters happen when your vitreous humor (fluid) changes its thickness. This causes you to see squiggly lines or threads. Floaters usually happen as we get older and may not need treatment. If you have a sudden onset of many floaters, see your eye care provider.

  6. Eye Floaters: Causes, Symptoms, Treatment - Verywell Health

    www.verywellhealth.com/what-causes-eye-floaters...

    What are the main causes of eye floaters? Floaters in the eye are most commonly caused by age-related changes in the retina. The retina is filled with a gel substance composed of water, collagen, and hyaluronan.

  7. Eye Floaters - Johns Hopkins Medicine

    www.hopkinsmedicine.org/.../eye-floaters

    What causes eye floaters? Eye floaters are most commonly a result of normal aging-related changes in the vitreous gel. As we get older, an acute development of a big central floater is a common symptom of a posterior vitreous detachment, where the vitreous gel separates from the back of the eye.