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Post-Concussion Vision Care In Brighton

Post-concussion vision care can help when there are lingering issues like blurred vision, light sensitivity, trouble focusing, or eye tracking trouble. These symptoms can affect everyday life, even when the eyes look healthy from the outside.

At Bayside Eyecare in Brighton, we assess how your eyes move, focus, and work together after concussion. The goal is to understand whether visual function is contributing to your symptoms, then guide the next steps with clear advice and practical management.

What Is Post-Concussion Vision Care?

Post-concussion vision care focuses on the way your eyes and brain work together after a concussion. A standard eye chart checks how clearly you can see at a distance. A post-concussion vision assessment looks more closely at visual skills that can be affected by head injury.

These may include:

  • Eye tracking
  • Focusing flexibility
  • Eye teaming
  • Depth perception
  • Visual comfort
  • Sensitivity to light and movement
  • Symptoms triggered by reading, screens, study, work, driving, or sport

At Bayside Eyecare, post-concussion vision care is designed to identify whether these visual changes are contributing to your symptoms and help you understand the most appropriate next step.

Who Is Post-Concussion Vision Care For?

Post-concussion vision care may be helpful for people who feel that their eyes, balance, or visual comfort have changed after a concussion. Symptoms can appear soon after the injury or become more noticeable over time.

You may benefit from an assessment if you are experiencing:

  • Blurred vision after concussion
  • Double vision or trouble keeping words clear
  • Light sensitivity or glare discomfort
  • Headaches during reading, study, or screen use
  • Dizziness or feeling visually overwhelmed in busy places
  • Trouble tracking a ball or moving object
  • Difficulty judging distance, depth, or movement
  • Symptoms that return during exercise or training

What Happens During A Post-Concussion Vision Assessment?

Your optometrist will ask about your concussion history, current symptoms, and the tasks that bring symptoms on. The assessment may include checks for:

  • Eye movement and tracking
  • Focusing flexibility
  • Eye teaming and binocular vision
  • Convergence for near tasks
  • Depth perception
  • Visual comfort under everyday demands
  • Prescription or eye health factors that may be adding to symptoms

This gives a clearer picture of whether your eyes are working comfortably together and whether concussion-related visual changes may be affecting daily life.

Supporting Recovery After Concussion Eye Symptoms

Post-concussion vision care is designed to support your broader recovery plan. It does not replace medical concussion care from your GP or treating health professionals. Post-concussion vision therapy may help with issues such as poor tracking, focusing fatigue, eye teaming problems, or visual discomfort. 

If vision therapy is recommended, the program is based on assessment findings and tailored to the person’s symptoms, goals, and stage of recovery.

For general concussion recovery and return-to-sport guidance, families and athletes can also refer to the Concussion in Sport Australia guidelines.

Returning To Sport After Concussion

Returning to sport after a concussion should be guided by your treating medical professional and the appropriate return-to-play process. Vision can be an important part of that picture for athletes who still notice symptoms during movement, training, or play.

Sport places extra pressure on the visual system. Players need to track movement, judge space, shift focus quickly, and make fast decisions under pressure. If concussion eye symptoms are still affecting those skills an assessment can help clarify what is happening before you return to full competition.

For athletes who want support beyond concussion recovery, Bayside Eyecare also provides sports vision care designed to improve visual skills such as tracking, depth perception, reaction time, and performance-related visual comfort. For more detail on football-related symptoms, you can read our guide to Concussion & Eye Problems In Football.

Post-Concussion Vision Care At Bayside Eyecare In Brighton

Bayside Eyecare provides post-concussion vision care for patients who need clearer answers about ongoing visual symptoms after concussion.

Our optometrists take the time to understand how your symptoms affect real daily tasks. This may include reading, screen use, study, work, driving, training, and sport.

If you are still experiencing blurred vision, light sensitivity, headaches, dizziness, or trouble focusing after a concussion, a post-concussion vision assessment can help understand what is happening.

Call (03) 9909 5329 or book an appointment online with Bayside Eyecare to receive clear guidance on the next step in your post-concussion recovery.

Post-Concussion Vision Care FAQ

What Symptoms Can A Concussion Optometrist Assess?

A concussion optometrist can assess visual symptoms such as blurred vision, double vision, light sensitivity, eye strain, headaches with reading, trouble focusing, dizziness, and difficulty tracking movement. The assessment looks at how your eyes move, focus, and work together after concussion.

Do I Need A Referral For Post-Concussion Vision Care?

No referral is usually needed to book an appointment with Bayside Eyecare. If you have had a recent concussion, it is important to follow advice from your GP, hospital team, sports doctor, or treating health professional as part of your broader recovery plan.

What Happens At A Post-Concussion Vision Assessment?

Your optometrist will ask about your concussion history, symptoms, and daily activities that trigger discomfort. They may assess eye tracking, focusing, binocular vision, convergence, depth perception, visual comfort, prescription needs, and eye health. You will receive clear advice about the findings and next steps.

Can Vision Therapy Help After Concussion?

Vision therapy after concussion may help some patients when assessment shows specific problems with eye tracking, focusing, eye teaming, or visual comfort. Any program should be tailored to the person’s symptoms, test results, and recovery stage.

When Should An Athlete Have A Return To Sport Vision Assessment?

An athlete should consider a return to sport vision assessment if visual symptoms continue during training, movement, or sport-specific tasks. Signs may include trouble tracking the ball, light sensitivity, slower reactions, dizziness with movement, or difficulty judging distance after concussion.