What eye floaters actually are

Eye floaters are small shapes — dots, threads, or cobwebs — that drift across your field of vision. They are caused by changes in the vitreous, the gel-like substance that fills the inside of your eye.

As the vitreous changes with age, small fibers inside it can clump together and cast shadows on the retina. Those shadows are what you see as floaters.

Most ophthalmologists describe floaters as harmless and permanent. That is partially accurate — they are rarely a sign of serious disease, and conventional medicine offers few treatment options beyond surgery. However, new research points to an additional mechanism that is rarely discussed in routine eye appointments.

Important: Sudden floaters, especially accompanied by flashes of light or a shadow across your vision, can indicate retinal detachment. This is a medical emergency — see an eye doctor immediately.

The 4 main options available today

Here is an honest overview of every currently available approach to floaters, along with the realistic limitations of each.

Option How it works Realistic outcome Cost
Watchful waiting Brain adapts to ignore floaters over time Partial Some adaptation, floaters remain $0
Vitrectomy Surgical removal of the vitreous gel Effective High success rate $3,000–$7,000
Laser vitreolysis Laser breaks up floater clusters Variable Works for some types only $1,000–$3,000
3-step root cause protocol Targets LPS toxin, gut bacteria, vitreous fibers Reported effective See section 4 Low

Surgery remains the only option with a strong clinical evidence base. However, most ophthalmologists consider it disproportionate for floaters that do not affect daily function — which means the majority of floater sufferers are sent home without a treatment plan.

The root cause most doctors don't address

Research published by teams at Texas A&M and Harvard Medical School has identified a connection between a bacterial toxin called lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and the degradation of vitreous fibers inside the eye.

LPS is a toxin produced by certain gut bacteria. In normal conditions, it is contained within the digestive system. However, when the gut microbiome is compromised, LPS can enter the bloodstream and accumulate in various tissues — including the vitreous of the eye.

The connection to floaters: LPS toxin in the vitreous triggers a low-grade inflammatory response that accelerates fiber degradation — producing the clumps and strands that cast shadows on the retina. Addressing the LPS buildup may slow or reverse this process.

This mechanism is not widely covered in standard ophthalmology. A former military eye doctor — who spent 30 years treating vision conditions in combat environments where surgical options were unavailable — developed a 3-step protocol based on this research.

The 3-step protocol explained

The protocol targets the LPS mechanism directly, in three sequential phases:

1

Neutralize LPS toxin in the bloodstream

Specific natural compounds bind to LPS molecules and reduce their concentration in the blood, limiting further accumulation in the vitreous.

2

Eliminate the bacteria producing LPS

Targeted gut microbiome support reduces the bacterial populations responsible for LPS overproduction at the source.

3

Rebuild vitreous fiber integrity

Specific nutrients support the natural repair of collagen fibers in the vitreous, reducing the density of existing floater clusters over time.

The full protocol — including the specific compounds used in each phase — is explained in a free video presentation by the doctor who developed it.

What people report after following it

74K+ People who watched the presentation
4.9★ Average viewer rating
6 wks Average time to first reported results

The free video explains the full protocol — including the specific compounds used in each step.

Watch the Free Presentation →
Free to watch  ·  No credit card  ·  15 minutes
★★★★★
Margaret T.  ·  Verified viewer
"I was considering a $3,000 vitrectomy. After 8 weeks on the protocol my floaters are significantly reduced. My optometrist confirmed it at my last appointment."
★★★★★
David K.  ·  Verified viewer
"My eye doctor told me there was nothing to do. After following this protocol for 7 weeks, I can drive at night without the shadows interfering."
★★★★★
Patricia W.  ·  Verified viewer
"I noticed improvement after 3 weeks. The explanation of the LPS mechanism made sense to me — I have a nursing background and it checked out."
Note: The free presentation has been temporarily removed twice due to server capacity. Watch while the link is currently active.
Watch the Free Eye Doctor Presentation
Free to watch  ·  No credit card required  ·  15 minutes
Yes, Show Me the Protocol Now →
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