If you searched for floaters today, you probably had one of these questions
"Do eye drops help with floaters?"
Short answer: no topical eye drop can physically reach the vitreous where floaters form. This article explains why — and what addresses the problem at the source.
"How do I actually get rid of eye floaters?"
Surgery works but carries risk and cost. A newer approach targets the biological root cause — a toxin called LPS linked to vitreous fiber degradation.
"Can eye floaters actually be cured?"
74,000+ people have followed a military eye doctor's protocol. Many report significant reduction within 6 weeks — without surgery or injections.
What eye floaters are — and why they form
Floaters are shadows cast on your retina by clumps of protein fiber inside the vitreous humor — the gel that fills the interior of your eye. As the vitreous changes with age, these fibers break down and cluster, producing the dots, threads, and cobwebs you see drifting across your vision.
Most ophthalmologists describe this as a normal aging process. What they rarely mention is the role a specific bacterial toxin plays in accelerating that degradation.
The LPS connection: Research from Texas A&M and Harvard Medical School has linked a toxin called lipopolysaccharide (LPS) — produced by certain gut bacteria — to accelerated vitreous fiber breakdown. When LPS enters the bloodstream through a compromised gut, it accumulates in vitreous tissue and triggers inflammation that worsens floater formation.
Every available option — and what the evidence actually shows
| Option | How it works | Limitation | Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eye drops (any type) |
Applied to the eye surface | Cannot penetrate to the vitreous anatomically | None for floaters |
| Watchful waiting | Brain adapts over time | Floaters remain — adaptation is partial | Partial relief |
| Laser vitreolysis | Laser breaks up floater clusters | Works for limited floater types only | Variable |
| Vitrectomy | Surgical removal of vitreous gel | Risk of retinal detachment, cataract | Effective — high risk |
| 3-step LPS protocol | Targets toxin, gut bacteria, vitreous fibers | Requires consistency over 6+ weeks | 74K+ viewers, 4.9★ |
Eye drops treat the surface. Surgery removes the symptom. The 3-step protocol is the only approach that addresses what may be causing the fibers to degrade in the first place — the LPS toxin accumulating in the vitreous from the bloodstream.
The 3-step protocol — how it works
A former military eye doctor developed this protocol after 30 years treating vision conditions in environments where surgery was not available. It works in three phases:
Neutralize LPS toxin in the bloodstream
Specific natural compounds bind to circulating LPS molecules and reduce their accumulation in vitreous tissue.
Eliminate the bacteria producing LPS
Targeted gut microbiome support reduces the bacterial populations responsible for LPS overproduction at the source.
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.
What people report after following it
I watched the whole video that night. By the end I was crying — not because I was sad, but because someone had finally explained why the floaters were there. Not just told me to accept them.
— Linda M., 67 · Retired nurse, Columbus OHThe full protocol — including the specific compounds used in each step — is explained in a free 15-minute video.
Yes, Show Me the Protocol Now →