Blurred vision is familiar to most people. Double vision isn’t, and when it appears, it’s often difficult to interpret. Seeing two separate images, whether side by side, overlapping or faintly shadowed, can feel unusual, particularly when it comes and goes. Because these episodes may be brief or limited to certain situations, they’re frequently attributed to fatigue or eye strain.
Double vision, known as diplopia, has a broad range of causes. Some are minor and resolve with simple measures. Others reflect changes in eye muscle coordination or nerve function. How diplopia appears, fluctuates and is described helps clinicians narrow the likely cause.
Dr Leo, ophthalmologist, breaks down what typically causes diplopia and how to identify when it may reflect an underlying neurological issue:
Diplopia, commonly known as double vision, refers to seeing two images of a single object. It can be categorised into binocular diplopia, which resolves when one eye is closed, and monocular diplopia, which persists even when the other eye is closed.
Binocular diplopia is often the result of eye misalignment. Common causes include:
- Cranial nerve palsies, affecting nerves that control the eye muscles (CN III, IV or VI). These may be microvascular, often linked to diabetes or hypertension, or due to more serious causes such as an aneurysm or tumour.
- Strabismus, either pre-existing or newly developed.
- Thyroid eye disease, an autoimmune condition that affects the eye muscles.
- Myasthenia gravis, an autoimmune disorder that leads to fluctuating muscle weakness.
- Trauma, particularly injuries involving the eye socket or surrounding muscles.
In comparison, monocular diplopia usually points to a problem within the eye itself. Common causes include:
- Astigmatism, caused by an irregular curvature of the cornea.
- Cataracts, where clouding of the lens alters visual clarity.
- Dry eye syndrome, which leads to an unstable or irregular tear film.
- Retinal abnormalities, although these are less commonly responsible.
Dr Leo notes several red flags that suggest the need for urgent evaluation, particularly when neurological causes are possible:
- Sudden onset of double vision, especially if accompanied by headache, pain or trauma.
- Neurological symptoms such as ptosis (drooping eyelid), unequal pupils, slurred speech, weakness, numbness or balance difficulties.
- Fluctuating or fatigue-related diplopia, which may indicate conditions such as myasthenia gravis.
- Binocular diplopia, which tends to be more concerning than monocular forms because it often points to neurological or neuromuscular causes.
This distinction is useful for recognising when double vision is likely harmless and when it may point to something more serious.
How double vision manifests in daily life
Diplopia often becomes noticeable during routine activities. People commonly describe:
- road markings that appear doubled briefly
- headlights that split into two at night
- text on screens appearing with a faint secondary shadow
- door frames or railings that look misaligned when glancing sideways
- letters that seem to shift apart while reading
- a tendency to tilt the head to reduce the effect
- double vision that appears only when looking in a particular direction
Children may show behavioural signs rather than describing visual symptoms. These include closing one eye while reading, losing their place frequently or turning the head to one side.
Double vision in children can be difficult to recognise because younger kids may not have the vocabulary to describe what they’re seeing. Instead of reporting “double vision,” they often show behavioural cues that parents may overlook.
Signs parents should watch for include:
- Closing or covering one eye while reading, watching TV or in bright light.
- Squinting or frequent head tilting or turning, as children may instinctively adjust their head position to merge two images into one.
- Clumsiness, frequent falls or misjudging steps, including reaching for objects inaccurately.
- Complaints of headaches or eye discomfort.
- A sudden onset of a “lazy eye” or crossed eyes.
Urgent medical attention is needed when diplopia is:
- Sudden in onset, especially if paired with new eye misalignment.
- Accompanied by headache, nausea, vomiting or drowsiness.
- Present after a head injury.
- Occurring alongside neurological symptoms such as facial droop or limb weakness.
It’s also important to note that children with longstanding strabismus typically don’t report double vision. To avoid visual confusion, the brain suppresses or “switches off” the image from the eye that is not aligned. This suppression allows the child to function without seeing double but can mask an underlying issue that still requires attention.
Why diplopia may fluctuate
The symptom doesn’t always remain constant. Factors such as dryness, fatigue and transient nerve irritation can change through the day, altering eye alignment or image clarity. Duration also matters, as long-standing diplopia is approached differently from symptoms that appear abruptly, particularly when clinicians are assessing whether the underlying cause is stable or evolving.
A simple way to distinguish the type of diplopia
Covering one eye is a useful first step:
If double vision remains when one eye is covered, it’s usually monocular diplopia, often related to surface or focusing issues in that eye.
If double vision disappears when either eye is covered, it’s typically binocular diplopia and usually reflects an alignment or coordination issue between the two eyes.
This distinction helps determine whether further testing focuses on the eye itself or on the nerves coordinating eye movement.
Dr Leo highlights that mild intermittent diplopia in older adults can sometimes be linked to age-related changes such as decompensated longstanding strabismus, early cataract or sagging eye syndrome. Sagging eye syndrome occurs when the connective tissues supporting the eye muscles weaken, leading to divergence insufficiency where double vision appears mainly during distance viewing.
However, Dr Leo emphasises that any sudden, persistent or progressive double vision should not be viewed as normal ageing. Conditions such as microvascular cranial nerve palsy, myasthenia gravis, thyroid orbitopathy or giant cell arteritis need to be ruled out with appropriate neurological or vascular assessment.
Prompt evaluation is needed when:- Diplopia is binocular and new.
- The onset is sudden, which may indicate a transient ischaemic attack (TIA) or a stroke affecting a cranial nerve.
- Symptoms suggest giant cell arteritis, including headache, scalp tenderness, jaw claudication and fever.
- Diplopia is accompanied by ptosis or pupil involvement, which may signal a third nerve palsy and a possible aneurysm-related emergency.
This distinction is important for recognising when double vision is expected with ageing and when it signals something more concerning.
How to describe double vision during a consultation
Clear, factual descriptions often provide more useful information than the term “double vision” alone. Clinicians reply on pattern, timing and context to interpret the symptom.
Helpful details include:
- started suddenly
- noticed over the past few weeks
- present intermittently for months
- side by side
- one above the other
- diagonal
- shadowed or ghost like
- slight separation or clearly split
- the double vision remains
- the double vision disappears
- during reading or screen use
- when looking in a particular direction
- at night or in dim light
- when tired or late in the day
- tilting the head
- blinking
- resting the eyes
- no noticeable change
- eye discomfort
- headache
- drooping eyelid
- dizziness
- recent sinus or viral illness
- new glasses or prescription changes
- medication changes
- recent illness or injury
- prolonged screen time or visual strain
- changes in blood sugar or blood pressure control
Functional impact is also relevant, such as difficulty reading, reduced confidence when driving at night or problems judging depth on stairs.
Clear descriptions help clinicians determine whether the diplopia is more likely related to the eye surface, muscle coordination or nerve involvement, and whether further testing is required.
Fluctuating double vision is often linked to fatigue, illness or variable muscle weakness. Common causes include myasthenia gravis, intermittent decompensation of a latent squint, thyroid-related eye disease or transient ischaemic episodes. In individuals with diabetes, intermittent spikes in blood sugar can temporarily alter the lens and affect vision.
In cases of intermittent diplopia, the double vision may not appear during the clinic examination. As a result, investigations often include fatigue testing, the ice-pack test, thyroid function studies, acetylcholine receptor antibody testing and neuroimaging to identify underlying systemic or neuromuscular causes.
Constant diplopia, on the other hand, requires a more urgent and comprehensive workup to rule out acute neurological events, tumours or significant nerve damage.
What an eye evaluation usually involves
Assessment of diplopia commonly includes eye movement and alignment testing, examination of the eye surface and tear film, vision and refraction checks, and screening for signs of muscle or nerve imbalance. Imaging is considered only when findings suggest deeper involvement.
Double vision can disrupt daily activities such as reading, walking and especially driving, as depth perception becomes unreliable. Dr Leo highlights that many patients instinctively compensate by adjusting their head position or closing one eye to make vision more comfortable.
Helpful strategies she often recommends include:
- Stopping driving, which is essential for both safety and legal reasons.
- Occluding one eye, using an opaque patch, a temporary cover over a spectacle lens or a frosted lens applied to one side of the glasses.
- Using prism lenses, which bend light to help the eyes fuse two images into one. Fresnel prisms are useful temporarily, while ground-in prisms are used for longer-term correction.
- Opting for large-print or audio books to reduce visual strain.
- Making simple environmental adjustments, such as improving lighting, installing handrails and keeping walkways clear to reduce the risk of trips and falls.
She adds that long-term treatment depends on the underlying cause and may involve prism correction, strabismus surgery or management of an associated systemic condition.
Diplopia ranges from brief, intermittent disturbances to symptoms that benefit from closer assessment. Identifying whether one eye or both are involved, how images separate, how long the symptom has been present and when the effect appears provides clinicians with key information to determine whether the likely cause relates to the eye surface, muscle coordination, nerve function or another factor.
Dr Leo Seo Wei
Senior Consultant Ophthalmologist
Dr Leo Adult & Paediatric Eye Specialist, Singapore
Instagram: @drleoeye
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