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Twitching Eyelids: The Causes and Solutions

Eyelid, Hypochondria

If you were to ask a room with 100 people this question, “Does anyone here ever get a twitching eyelid?” How many hands do you think would go up? I am guessing that 97 hands would instantly fly up.

If you are reading this content, you are probably an eyelid twitcher, because unless a person gets twitchy eyelids, it’s doubtful that he or she would be interested in clicking on this article.

Take my warning: If your eyelids twitch from time to time; or if they twitch every day; or if the twitching can more be described as thumping; or if after a lot of twitching the lid feels fatigued — no matter what you ever do in life, do NOT — I repeat — do NOT Google twitching eyelids.

Because if you do, you will invariably get links to sites that mention that twitching muscles are a symptom of a serious, fatal neurological disease. And if you are vulnerable, prone to hypochondria, under a lot of stress or suffer from general anxiety, or if you are just for some mysterious reason in a highly suggestible mental state, you will allow your imagination to run amok, and you will then begin fearing that your twitching eyelids are a sign of a terrible neurological malady.

There is no neurological malady of which twitching eyelids are a hallmark symptom. In fact, twitchy eyelids are so common in the general population, that it would be difficult to pinpoint them as an actual symptom of a disease, if the twitcher has a disease. The twitching would be coincidental.

For example, take Parkinson’s disease. Certainly, many people with PD have twitching eyelids. But so do many people with diabetes, heart disease, lupus, brain tumors and Crohn’s disease. Whether you’re healthy or not, twitching eyelids are just a fact of life.

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Besides, if they WERE a sign of a serious nerve disorder, there would be OTHER symptoms along with the jumpy eyelids; and these other symptoms would rank much higher on the list of bodily problems (i.e., difficulty swallowing food; difficulty walking up and down stairs; difficulty picking up eating utensils). Eyelid twitching in isolation is not indicative of disease.

Causes of eyelid twitching: general eye strain (too much computer time or too much reading); fatigue; calcium/magnesium/potassium deficiency; and topping the list is stress and anxiety! And if you stress out over the twitching, you’ll probably twitch even more!

Here are two more causes: contact lenses and strenuous heavy weight lifting. Chronic wearing of contact lenses can really irritate the eyelid muscles, making them twitch and jump. Heavy weight lifting may cause the eyelid muscles to tense up. The tensing then causes twitching. Irritants from cosmetics may also cause twitching.

Lastly, aggressive rubbing or scratching the eyelids can cause them to twitch. Many eyelid twitchers report that twitching bouts can linger for weeks on end, then suddenly disappear, then suddenly reappear months later.

Solutions: Drink plenty of water; get adequate calcium and mineral intake; gently rub the eyelid with a fingertip — and gently; aggressive rubbing can trigger twitching; and finally, don’t fret about your twitching eyelids — eyelids take a beating daily, blinking hundreds of times a day to protect your eyes from pollutants, dust, allergens, microscopic spores, sunlight and wind.