Please note our holiday hours: 
December 24: 9 am – 1 pm
December 25: CLOSED
December 26: CLOSED
January 1: CLOSED

alarm-ringing ambulance angle2 archive arrow-down arrow-left arrow-right arrow-up at-sign baby baby2 bag binoculars book-open book2 bookmark2 bubble calendar-check calendar-empty camera2 cart chart-growth check chevron-down chevron-left chevron-right chevron-up circle-minus circle city clapboard-play clipboard-empty clipboard-text clock clock2 cloud-download cloud-windy cloud clubs cog cross crown cube youtube diamond4 diamonds drop-crossed drop2 earth ellipsis envelope-open envelope exclamation eye-dropper eye facebook file-empty fire flag2 flare foursquare gift glasses google graph hammer-wrench heart-pulse heart home instagram joystick lamp layers lifebuoy link linkedin list lock magic-wand map-marker map medal-empty menu microscope minus moon mustache-glasses paper-plane paperclip papers pen pencil pie-chart pinterest plus-circle plus power printer pushpin question rain reading receipt recycle reminder sad shield-check smartphone smile soccer spades speed-medium spotlights star-empty star-half star store sun-glasses sun tag telephone thumbs-down thumbs-up tree tumblr twitter tiktok wechat user users wheelchair write yelp youtube

How Smoking Harms Eye Health

Smoking is harmful to every system in the body, including eyesight.

Lung cancer is the risk we most commonly associate with a smoking habit, followed by oral health problems, but it doesn’t stop with the parts of the body the smoke comes in contact with. As eye doctors, we want to focus on how smoking harms the eyes, which it does in a number of ways.

Smoking Is a Serious Risk Factor for Age-Related Eye Diseases

Numerous studies show that smoking significantly increases the risk of developing eye conditions from those as simple as dry eye to ones as serious as cataracts, glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), and diabetic retinopathy.

Smoking and Cataracts

The risk of developing cataracts doubles with a smoking habit. Cataracts are the world’s leading cause of blindness. Symptoms of cataracts include light sensitivity, faded colors, blurred or double vision, and poor night vision. The good news is that cataract surgery is both common and safe, which means vision loss due to cataracts isn’t necessarily permanent.

Smoking and Diabetic Retinopathy

As is probably obvious due to its name, diabetic retinopathy is closely associated with diabetes, and smoking increases the likelihood of developing diabetes by as much as 40%. As a result, smoking also makes complications of diabetes more likely, including retinopathy. This is a sight-threatening condition that involves weakened blood vessels in the back of the eye, which can leak blotches into the field of vision and starve the retina of oxygen.

Smoking and AMD

The part of the retina responsible for our sharpest, most detailed vision is called the macula. Age-related macular degeneration is a condition where the macula deteriorates over time, causing irreversible blindness. Smokers are three times more likely to develop AMD than nonsmokers are, and they’re also more likely to develop it years earlier than they would have otherwise.

It Doesn’t Only Affect Smokers

The worst harms from smoking are experienced by the smokers themselves, but some of them come from secondhand smoke. Secondhand smoke can increase the risk of heart disease, lung cancer, and stroke in nonsmokers. In children, it can lead to ear infections, asthma attacks, bronchitis, pneumonia, and even an increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome.

Is Vaping a Safe Alternative?

It might be true that vaping is safer than traditional cigarettes, but it’s still a long way from safe. Many of the chemicals in e-cigarette liquid have specifically been linked with increased risks of the sight-threatening conditions described above. Basically, there is no safe way to consume tobacco.

Choose Healthy Vision by Breaking the Habit

With all that we’ve discussed, it shouldn’t be too surprising that smoking is the most preventable cause of vision loss. We can’t stop ourselves from aging, but we can avoid smoking. Even for lifelong heavy smokers, quitting will still reduce the risk of eye disease. If you or someone you love needs resources to help quit smoking, we’re happy to provide suggestions.

Overall health and eye health go hand in hand!

Top image used under CC0 Public Domain license. Image cropped and modified from original.
The content on this blog is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of qualified health providers with questions you may have regarding medical conditions.