I suggest to try out lenses. At the beginning it's a little bit difficult to put them in or to remove them, but (at least for me) they work much better than glasses.
If you are lucky and the lenses work well for you, you won't even notice that you have them inside (except for the fact that your vision is much better).
Then get dailies. They tend to get uncomfortable after about 8 hours (the ones I use anyway), but if you're going out after work, and you can get by without them, all you have to do is throw them out.
Contact lenses are good for certain issues with eyes, but not others -- at least around here, they're worn a lot more by short-sighted people than long-sighted people, and the article is definitely describing someone who's long-sighted.
The problem is that if you need to correct your vision for close-up work, a lens that corrects sufficiently may not be suitable for general purpose vision. In this case, you need to use glasses as you'll need to take them off when you get up from your computer, or you'll need bi- or vari-focals.
True. I wear contact lenses to correct for my general near-sightedness. And then I wear reading glasses on top of them when sitting for long periods at a computer.
It's under 450 words which, for an average native English speaker, will take about a minute and a half to read without skimming to find the important bits. It's rather disappointing if something so short needs to be summarized.
His summary is under 25 words; you can read a lot more such summaries in 1½ minutes.
This is why Google SERPs return a snippet and not the whole page of text for every page. Summarising is a very useful thing. What is it about saving time that disappoints you?
There are lots of things that can result from bad eye sight.
I didn't get headache from my bad eyesight (around 1/2 dioptrin), but easily got completely tired during work (no matter how much I've sleeped during the night). Since I've got lenses this issue disappeared, no more tiredness at all during the day.
If you are tired and your eyes are ok, you might want to check for allergies (at least mine didn't have any effects on throat/nose, so it might not be obvious). Or bacteria infection (teeth, etc).
You mean "Flu", which is actually short for "influenza," and contrary to most people's belief is not simply a bad cold, but can be a life-threatening condition.
Most victims were healthy young adults, in contrast to most influenza outbreaks, which predominantly affect juvenile, elderly, or weakened patients.
The pandemic lasted from June 1918 to December 1920, spreading even to the Arctic and remote Pacific islands. Between 50 and 100 million died, making it one of the deadliest natural disasters in human history. Even using the lower estimate of 50 million people, 3% of the world's population (1.86 billion at the time) died of the disease. Some 500 million, or 27% (≈1/4), were infected.
Pandemic flus are the exception, not the rule. None of us may see one in our lifetimes, even if we have (and recover from) a dozen cases of seasonal flus. Also, some believe the death rates from the 1918 pandemic were more due to concomitant bacterial infections than the flu strain itself.
> Caffeine withdrawal symptom (and the cure isn't more caffeine ;) )
I don't know about that, actually. Caffeine is the active ingredient in (low-power, over-the-counter) migraine medication, because it has anti-inflammatory properties. People who have chronic headaches may be unintentionally self-medicating with caffeine; for them, the caffeine withdrawal period becomes concurrent with their regular headaches returning.
More anecdotally, when I don't drink caffeine (and I do go off it for months at a time), I get headaches on and off, about once per week or so. When I do drink caffeine, though, I literally never get headaches.
It was my understanding that it is included because many people taking headache pills don't actually realize that they are caffeine addicts and don't recognize the withdrawal symptoms for what they are. This makes the pills more effective in making that class of headaches go away by eliminating the withdrawal symptoms, sort of how heroin is an effective cure for heroin withdrawal.
> It was my understanding that it is included because many people taking headache pills don't actually realize that they are caffeine addicts and don't recognize the withdrawal symptoms for what they are.
Many things about the OTC drug market in America are rather disturbing. 26k people per year are hospitalized from acetaminophen poisoning, and about two die every day. It's the scumminess of the pharma industry, with less adult supervision.
As with many things, all the suggested reasons apply, in different proportions for different people. The caffeine may help with vasodilation-related symptoms. It also may help with any other caffeine-withdrawal symptoms, if present. And it may create a slight new dependence – as with the other painkiller ingredients, which can contribute to 'rebound headaches' with persistent use. Adding an addictive yet legal substance to your product is rarely bad for repeat business.
No, it's because it's a vasoconstrictor. As a person who is both a caffeine addict and a past sufferer of angina pectoralis, I can testify that the headaches caused by caffeine withdrawal and the headaches caused by nitroclycerine (a vasodilator) are one and the same.
Vasodilation is not necessarily chemically induced, but it is a common-enough proximate cause of headaches (and some other forms of pain) that using a mild vasoconstrictor in addition to an analgesic is more likely to make a general-purpose pain reliever work effectively.
Is the pain localized? Because you might be getting low-grade migraines.
I used to regularly get stress-induced migraines (before I regularly drank anything caffeinated). Then I started drinking 2 cups of tea or coffee per day, which completely cleared up the issue.
Of course, if I go "off schedule," I get a headache now almost immediately.
I had headaches usually about three or so days per week. Sodas and tea were my sources of caffeine. One day I decided to quit. I had three days of headache and a week of jaw soreness (another symptom of withdrawal). Since then I have been mostly headache free now. I missed chai tea, but I found a decaf mix the other day so I'm set.
Also, analgesics can cause "rebound headache" - you have a headache, you take pain relief for a few days, the headache stops, and you stop taking the pain killer. Then you get a rebound headache. This especially happens with ibuprofen.
According to my doctor, ibuprofen does not not have this rebound property and is preferred over codeine-based drugs like Solpadine which definitely can cause rebound headaches.
But, in general, yes headache medications can actually cause headaches. Ask your pharmacist.
I used to regularly get headaches on Sundays. I thought it was from sleeping in. I eventually figured out it was because I drank coffee at work, and not on weekends, and it was a weekly caffeine withdrawal effect.
Bad sitting posture, bad chairs and anything that could strain the spinal cord could result in serious issues. A friend was just short of a disk slip because of his sitting posture. He had a bad headache and after a diagnosis that took a month it turned out to be a problem with his spine.
I googled it and found that the underlying reason seems to be high blood pressure, which can be caused by extremely high amounts of triglycerines. Unless you eat insane amounts of fat, I think it is easier to lower your blood pressure in other ways (exercising, quitting smoking, reducing sodium intake)
+1 for the diet suggestions, but I'd add exercise in their too, it has a bonus side effect of increasing your stamina so you'll no longer need caffeine.
Add dental problems to that list. I had increasingly worse headaches for a few years due to a molar that was very, very slowly becoming impacted into the next tooth over.
Once it finally actually rose to the level of a toothache and I got it pulled, the change was enormous.
I used to have very bad headaches when working and found out that it was due to a bad position of my neck. I've since changed my office chair, made sure that the screen is positioned so that I don't look down and the headaches have disappeared...
> made sure that the screen is positioned so that I don't look down
Guys working on laptops should pay attention to this.
Looking down (tilting the head forward, even slightly) means the muscles in the back of the neck now have to hold up the weight of your head (3 kilos?), instead of merely balancing it, as when the head is upright. This can cause serious neck tension.
Here's the thing about headaches though - what triggers it for one person is not always the same for another.
The motivation to share advice is admirable but it's just as mistaken as similar "this is the path to my success, you should do it too because it should work for everyone".
With my left eye, I can't focus on objects closer than 12 inch.
With my right eye, I can't focus on objects further than 26 inch.
I have glasses to correct this, but without glasses I can comfortably use a computer at a 'sweet spot' distance of 18 inch ;-)
Any closer and my left eye image begins to become blurred. Lately I've done a lot of fine soldering work, and then it becomes really obvious. I think I need reading glasses, too.
My left eye is "lazy" (sorry, I don't know what's the equivalent term in English) that means that most of the work is done by the right one. If you have the same condition, it would explain the acute difference.
When it was diagnosed, they told me that it was too late to correct. For children "pirate patches" are used to blind the good eye and train the lazy one.
If everyone reading this discussion takes only one thing away from it, I hope it is to watch out for their kids in case they develop a bias towards one eye. You can do something about it, but only until they are about 7 years old. After that, the problem is to do with the development of the brain rather than of the eye, and today's medical science has no way to correct it.
BTW, there is definitely an English term "lazy eye", but I don't know whether it has the same meaning or refers to another specific condition.
I've seen "lazy eye" used two ways. One is exactly what you're talking about. I had it (and the corresponding pirate eyepatch treatment) as a kid. The other is when one eye doesn't physically track with the other.
My guess is that like lots of other medical wisdom/folklore about the adult brain, we'll eventually find workable exceptions to the idea that favoring one eye is irreversible after a certain age. Physical qualities of the eye that contributed to the initial imbalance can now be surgically corrected; neuroscience has found that creation of new brain cells continues far later in life than previously thought; some drugs (including SSRIs) have been found to trigger neurogenesis in adults, as does exercise.
Ah, the "I don't need glasses, it is only that my arm is too short" effect. That's a well known ageing process. The lens of the eye is an elastic body that bounces back to a more spherical form if you focus on something in the near, but over the years the material becomes less and less elastic, so the nearest point you can focus on moves further and further away. (That is on reason why small children trying to show you something hold it right in front of your nose: for them it is the distance where they can see small things best.)
Eh, no - just get glasses. Even big letters are still blurry when your eyes start deteriorating. You can still turn up the font size, but first make sure that everything you see, you see it sharp.
I had the same problem - late afternoon headaches, tiredness. It was a colleague who took one look at how close I sat to the monitor to tell me to get my eyesight checked. Diagnosis: long-sighted in one eye, short-sighted in the other, which caused quite significant muscle strain while my eyes constantly fought eachother for focus, causing headaches and tiredness. Prescription goggles and the problems vanished.
Get your eyes checked, at best you get told you have 20/20 vision and you're mad, and to drink more coffee. At worst you're in line for glasses
"Get your eyes checked, at best you get told you have 20/20 vision and you're mad, and to drink more coffee. At worst you're in line for glasses"
I'd turn that best/worst around. Glasses are easy to get, cheap, and work deterministically and measurably. If you have 20/20 vision and still have headaches, you probably have bigger problems than the relatively minor nuisance of wearing reading glasses.
I didn't have late afternoon tiredness or headaches, but I noticed that sometimes after staring at a computer screen or TV for a long time my eyes would get entirely bloodshot. It would last about 2 days before it finally cleared. I would also get a pain, but it felt like it was my eyes rather than a headache.
It turns out my one eye has a slight astigmatism (I think that's the term) but it's just enough to need glasses for driving and TV watching. With my computer I've made adjustments so I'm not overly concentrating with my other eye. It had been about 5-7 years between my last eye exam because I thought I had 20/20 vision so sometime in between there I developed problems.
So even if you think you have 20/20 vision you still might want to go get an eye exam periodically.
I've had similar symptoms, and finally got around to getting an eye test. Bottom line I need glasses too. I started getting very bad headaches in my late 20's, I'm early 30's now.
Glasses make a World of difference, esp as I am usually looking at more than one screen and switching between them.
I went for a very light frame, like Lindberg for example as these were most comfortable.
In my case I get headaches due to lack of sleep. Normally when I get small(2 secs) but powerful bursts of pain on the back of my head with an interval of 6-20secs, I know it's time to sleep...
Plenty of pages that get linked to from HN are pretty bad for readability - awful contrast or weird font choices. User side CSS is nice, but it's a shame to have to fix so many sites.
I have a -18,50 D in my right eye, and -18D in my left, with a small non-progressive cataract in both pupils (it's in the genes, mother has them also). Not to mention the spherical abberation and the PVD I've had in both eyes, due to a combination of kickboxing and my eyes being so bad, It triggered the condition at young age.
I can't look at white screens for too long, the floaters in front of my eyes will start to give me headaches because they distract me from my focus point.
I've been getting chronic headaches for a year and a half now, but even though I'm pretty handicapped in my eyesight, here are some tips:
- Make sure you're not staring into bright daylight/ not sitting right next to a window, which will make it harder for you to focus.
- Use as much black as possible, a black theme is a must for your editor! I hated Zend studio when they stopped being easily to configure in the theme department. When I found Apatana Studio I fell in love with the default dark themes.
- Make sure your monitors are up to date. Your resolution and sharpness of Fonts must be adequate. And if you feel yourself leaning over to read something on your screens. We have a problem...
I'm sporting two 27" monitors right now at EYE HEIGHT.
Which leads me to...
POSTURE POSTURE POSTURE POSTURE POSTURE.
- Leaning forward is NOT good. Better, angle backwards a little bit if your chair allows it. If you start leaning forward, your back muscles will tense up, which will tense up your shoulders, which will tense up your neck...which will tense up your scalp, and there we go, chronic tension headache.
Relax your shoulders, make sure they're not shrugged up when you're using your keyboard and mouse. Otherwise fix your chair/desk height.
- Ok so we can also get the migraines out a little bit, they are more often caused by eye strain, or poor circulation. Quit smoking, leave your work area for a short stroll from time to time. I get the sharp migraines a little bit less.
- Tension headaches might also result from a misconfiguration in the bedroom area. Wrong mattress, wrong cushions: headache.
I've always had headaches but some months are worse than others. I wear glasses for driving but generally not for every day wear (it's a psychological thing) and I've generally put it down to that.
After 3-4 days of a constant splitting headache which felt like I'd been hit with a cleaver, I noticed a lump at the back of my head/neck. This was finally enough to make me go to the doctor (obviously fearing brain cancer or some other deathly disease). The doctor diagnosed "Occipital Neuralgia" [1] which is basically the compression of one of the scalp nerves as it exits the spinal column. As I often end up slumped forward in my chair, head angled up, this was compressing those nerves and causing the pain. It had never occurred to me that the pain could have a physical cause. Since then, better posture control has meant very few headaches.
The lump it turns out is just a swollen glad, possibly from an unrelated minor infection or from the swollen nerve itself.
Pains in the back of the head, or down the side of the face it is almost certainly neck/back related. After suffering a couple of years with on/off head pain I finally figured this out & it literally took a couple of sessions to work the tightness out.
(I had a scare too because the trapped nerves in my neck caused lumps to appear all up and down the length of it :S not fun!)
So, yeh, I second the recommendation to get a medical professional to look at posture.
Last week I bought a Macbook Air with 13" and I haven't been able to sit in front of it for that long, the resolution makes everything too tiny specially because I work on a lower resolution laptop the whole day and only use the MBA at night. I have no idea if I will get used to it or if I just have to return it. I've been thinking about how wrong the future is going to be to our eyes if we keep improving the resolution of screens when operating systems don't deal that well with it. (I use Windows 7 on the MBA and I can't just go for a smaller resolution because type gets blurred.)
I have the same problem. Everything is very tiny. I just end up pinch zooming most web pages. I'm thinking of buying a desktop monitor and hooking it up with the MBA.
In all honesty I think I have to go see an optometrist also. It's long due. I'm getting these headaches staring at the MBA screen, never used to get them before.
You can change the text scaling in Windows whilst keeping the screen resolution native: Control Panel\Appearance and Personalization\Display - try setting it to Medium.
I know about this but as a web developer/designer I would prefer not to mess with anything other than the resolution. I too am thinking the possibility of using an external screen and use the Macbook Air as a desktop because it's really fast. But I'm very sad about this outcome.
You know when I tried setting it to Medium or Large it almost looked like Metro!
Protip from personal experience:
If your method of identifying someone at distance relies on recognizing the gait of a blurry outline of a person, you may need glasses.
| "If you have headaches, especially chronic ones do yourself a favor and have your eyes checked, you might need glasses without realizing it."
Glasses are a good way of weakening the eyes even further. Eye exercises are a better way of keeping you vision in good shape. Keep your arm extended, focus on thumb, slowly bring it as close as possible. Extend again.
When reading a page on the computer, avoid scrolling line by line with a mouse as you read. Better for the eyes to use the space bar to do page scrolling.
If you find reading a book is out of focus, you might wait for 10 seconds or so, for the eyes to focus. Happens if you are not used to focusing on near objects.
Not sure about the scholarly literature on it, but my eye doctors (several different ones over the years) have almost always mentioned how it's better to slightly undercorrect the vision, so that the eyes still have to work a bit at focusing. They implied that to do otherwise could speed the degradation of your vision.
I am from the East. We rely on common sense and what has _actually_ worked for us in our life, and what has worked for generations. I take studies done in the West (esp wrt health) with a pinch of salt. (Which reminds me of the fad about low-salt for which their are many authoratative studies and research but its still not true)
My ophtalmologist said something among similar lines. It seems that using glasses with the same strength for reading/screenwork and normal activities (e.g. being outside) can have bad effects on your eyesight and actually make it worse over time, because you do not train your eyes enough. He recommended to me, that i should use two different glasses for when i need to work in front of the screen and for the rest of the day.
I used to have no glasses at all, and got severe headache attacks that would last for days. I then went to see a doctor and they found out that i was overaccomodating my eyes, and that i needed a pair of strong glasses, to relax the muscles of my eyes since they were constantly cramping trying to automatically make up for the loss in eyesight.
Kicking the caffeine habit was what did it for me. Don't go cold turkey: I titrated slowly off the caffeine over the course of a month, and still had some withdrawal symptons (ie, headaches).
I still get headaches, but they're much less frequent, much less severe and it's usually much easier to track down the cause. (It's usually lack of sleep combined with too much screen time).
As a bonus, if I avoid computer & TV screens for the 2 hours before bed, I fall asleep within 30 seconds of my head hitting the pillow.
Sometimes when I'm focused I forget to eat, not sure if this is common among others but the concept of hunger doesn't always strike me if im in the zone. Remembering to eat and to eat healthy reduced the amount of headaches greatly.
What timing, I went through this process over the last two months. My new glasses will be ready on Thursday. I can read anything, even the smallest type without them. But after 8 hours, it hurts. Hopefully it won't soon.
I was getting terrible headaches for a few months before I tried turning my screen brightness down around 20%. Daily headaches instantly became monthly headaches.
Getting new glasses might be the solution for some people, but for others, it could easily be something like having your screen brightness just a little too bright or dim.
114 comments
[ 0.23 ms ] story [ 172 ms ] threadAm still trying to get used to wearing them. And the first time I wore my glasses everything seemed so much clearer.
If you are lucky and the lenses work well for you, you won't even notice that you have them inside (except for the fact that your vision is much better).
I went back to glasses anyway, because I missed the way they look on my face.
The problem is that if you need to correct your vision for close-up work, a lens that corrects sufficiently may not be suitable for general purpose vision. In this case, you need to use glasses as you'll need to take them off when you get up from your computer, or you'll need bi- or vari-focals.
"If you have headaches, especially chronic ones do yourself a favor and have your eyes checked, you might need glasses without realizing it."
This is why Google SERPs return a snippet and not the whole page of text for every page. Summarising is a very useful thing. What is it about saving time that disappoints you?
His summary is short.
Brevity is useful.
I didn't get headache from my bad eyesight (around 1/2 dioptrin), but easily got completely tired during work (no matter how much I've sleeped during the night). Since I've got lenses this issue disappeared, no more tiredness at all during the day.
* Lack of sleep
* Lack of magnesium or iron
* Too much sugar/fat
* Caffeine withdrawal symptom (and the cure isn't more caffeine ;) )
* Bad position (especially in the neck)
* Flu, cold, etc.
(Pet peeve - sorry - bad personal experience)
Most victims were healthy young adults, in contrast to most influenza outbreaks, which predominantly affect juvenile, elderly, or weakened patients.
The pandemic lasted from June 1918 to December 1920, spreading even to the Arctic and remote Pacific islands. Between 50 and 100 million died, making it one of the deadliest natural disasters in human history. Even using the lower estimate of 50 million people, 3% of the world's population (1.86 billion at the time) died of the disease. Some 500 million, or 27% (≈1/4), were infected.
I don't know about that, actually. Caffeine is the active ingredient in (low-power, over-the-counter) migraine medication, because it has anti-inflammatory properties. People who have chronic headaches may be unintentionally self-medicating with caffeine; for them, the caffeine withdrawal period becomes concurrent with their regular headaches returning.
More anecdotally, when I don't drink caffeine (and I do go off it for months at a time), I get headaches on and off, about once per week or so. When I do drink caffeine, though, I literally never get headaches.
If I remember correctly, caffeine's purpose in migraine medication is to accelerate the delivery of the payload.
If true, I would find that rather disturbing.
Vasodilation is not necessarily chemically induced, but it is a common-enough proximate cause of headaches (and some other forms of pain) that using a mild vasoconstrictor in addition to an analgesic is more likely to make a general-purpose pain reliever work effectively.
I used to regularly get stress-induced migraines (before I regularly drank anything caffeinated). Then I started drinking 2 cups of tea or coffee per day, which completely cleared up the issue.
Of course, if I go "off schedule," I get a headache now almost immediately.
(http://www.helpforpain.com/arch2000aug.htm)
That site says rebound headache are the most common cause of pain referral to doctors, which is a surprise to me. I would have thought back pain was.
But, in general, yes headache medications can actually cause headaches. Ask your pharmacist.
Bad sitting posture, bad chairs and anything that could strain the spinal cord could result in serious issues. A friend was just short of a disk slip because of his sitting posture. He had a bad headache and after a diagnosis that took a month it turned out to be a problem with his spine.
* lack of exercise
* smoking
near the top
> Too much sugar/fat
I googled it and found that the underlying reason seems to be high blood pressure, which can be caused by extremely high amounts of triglycerines. Unless you eat insane amounts of fat, I think it is easier to lower your blood pressure in other ways (exercising, quitting smoking, reducing sodium intake)
Once it finally actually rose to the level of a toothache and I got it pulled, the change was enormous.
Guys working on laptops should pay attention to this. Looking down (tilting the head forward, even slightly) means the muscles in the back of the neck now have to hold up the weight of your head (3 kilos?), instead of merely balancing it, as when the head is upright. This can cause serious neck tension.
The motivation to share advice is admirable but it's just as mistaken as similar "this is the path to my success, you should do it too because it should work for everyone".
With my right eye, I can't focus on objects further than 26 inch.
I have glasses to correct this, but without glasses I can comfortably use a computer at a 'sweet spot' distance of 18 inch ;-)
Any closer and my left eye image begins to become blurred. Lately I've done a lot of fine soldering work, and then it becomes really obvious. I think I need reading glasses, too.
When it was diagnosed, they told me that it was too late to correct. For children "pirate patches" are used to blind the good eye and train the lazy one.
If everyone reading this discussion takes only one thing away from it, I hope it is to watch out for their kids in case they develop a bias towards one eye. You can do something about it, but only until they are about 7 years old. After that, the problem is to do with the development of the brain rather than of the eye, and today's medical science has no way to correct it.
BTW, there is definitely an English term "lazy eye", but I don't know whether it has the same meaning or refers to another specific condition.
Get your eyes checked, at best you get told you have 20/20 vision and you're mad, and to drink more coffee. At worst you're in line for glasses
I'd turn that best/worst around. Glasses are easy to get, cheap, and work deterministically and measurably. If you have 20/20 vision and still have headaches, you probably have bigger problems than the relatively minor nuisance of wearing reading glasses.
It turns out my one eye has a slight astigmatism (I think that's the term) but it's just enough to need glasses for driving and TV watching. With my computer I've made adjustments so I'm not overly concentrating with my other eye. It had been about 5-7 years between my last eye exam because I thought I had 20/20 vision so sometime in between there I developed problems.
So even if you think you have 20/20 vision you still might want to go get an eye exam periodically.
Glasses make a World of difference, esp as I am usually looking at more than one screen and switching between them. I went for a very light frame, like Lindberg for example as these were most comfortable.
Don't forget that in England your employer makes a contribution to the cost of eye-tests and glasses if you're a monitor user.
(http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Employment/HealthAndSafetyAtWork...)
Plenty of pages that get linked to from HN are pretty bad for readability - awful contrast or weird font choices. User side CSS is nice, but it's a shame to have to fix so many sites.
I can't look at white screens for too long, the floaters in front of my eyes will start to give me headaches because they distract me from my focus point. I've been getting chronic headaches for a year and a half now, but even though I'm pretty handicapped in my eyesight, here are some tips:
- Make sure you're not staring into bright daylight/ not sitting right next to a window, which will make it harder for you to focus. - Use as much black as possible, a black theme is a must for your editor! I hated Zend studio when they stopped being easily to configure in the theme department. When I found Apatana Studio I fell in love with the default dark themes.
- Make sure your monitors are up to date. Your resolution and sharpness of Fonts must be adequate. And if you feel yourself leaning over to read something on your screens. We have a problem... I'm sporting two 27" monitors right now at EYE HEIGHT. Which leads me to...
POSTURE POSTURE POSTURE POSTURE POSTURE. - Leaning forward is NOT good. Better, angle backwards a little bit if your chair allows it. If you start leaning forward, your back muscles will tense up, which will tense up your shoulders, which will tense up your neck...which will tense up your scalp, and there we go, chronic tension headache. Relax your shoulders, make sure they're not shrugged up when you're using your keyboard and mouse. Otherwise fix your chair/desk height.
- Ok so we can also get the migraines out a little bit, they are more often caused by eye strain, or poor circulation. Quit smoking, leave your work area for a short stroll from time to time. I get the sharp migraines a little bit less.
- Tension headaches might also result from a misconfiguration in the bedroom area. Wrong mattress, wrong cushions: headache.
After 3-4 days of a constant splitting headache which felt like I'd been hit with a cleaver, I noticed a lump at the back of my head/neck. This was finally enough to make me go to the doctor (obviously fearing brain cancer or some other deathly disease). The doctor diagnosed "Occipital Neuralgia" [1] which is basically the compression of one of the scalp nerves as it exits the spinal column. As I often end up slumped forward in my chair, head angled up, this was compressing those nerves and causing the pain. It had never occurred to me that the pain could have a physical cause. Since then, better posture control has meant very few headaches.
The lump it turns out is just a swollen glad, possibly from an unrelated minor infection or from the swollen nerve itself.
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occipital_neuralgia
My osteopath calls it "programmers bump" :)
Pains in the back of the head, or down the side of the face it is almost certainly neck/back related. After suffering a couple of years with on/off head pain I finally figured this out & it literally took a couple of sessions to work the tightness out.
(I had a scare too because the trapped nerves in my neck caused lumps to appear all up and down the length of it :S not fun!)
So, yeh, I second the recommendation to get a medical professional to look at posture.
In all honesty I think I have to go see an optometrist also. It's long due. I'm getting these headaches staring at the MBA screen, never used to get them before.
You know when I tried setting it to Medium or Large it almost looked like Metro!
Apple should be ashamed to not have this working by now.
Glasses are a good way of weakening the eyes even further. Eye exercises are a better way of keeping you vision in good shape. Keep your arm extended, focus on thumb, slowly bring it as close as possible. Extend again.
When reading a page on the computer, avoid scrolling line by line with a mouse as you read. Better for the eyes to use the space bar to do page scrolling.
If you find reading a book is out of focus, you might wait for 10 seconds or so, for the eyes to focus. Happens if you are not used to focusing on near objects.
Source?
I used to have no glasses at all, and got severe headache attacks that would last for days. I then went to see a doctor and they found out that i was overaccomodating my eyes, and that i needed a pair of strong glasses, to relax the muscles of my eyes since they were constantly cramping trying to automatically make up for the loss in eyesight.
I still get headaches, but they're much less frequent, much less severe and it's usually much easier to track down the cause. (It's usually lack of sleep combined with too much screen time).
As a bonus, if I avoid computer & TV screens for the 2 hours before bed, I fall asleep within 30 seconds of my head hitting the pillow.
Heed this advice - just be aware!
Getting new glasses might be the solution for some people, but for others, it could easily be something like having your screen brightness just a little too bright or dim.