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mostly stress
Daryl Dragon does not have an actual eye disease. He has Parkinson's Disease, which causes his eyes to spasms and tremors.
There is no direct scientific evidence to suggest that eye color directly affects reaction time. Reaction time is more likely influenced by factors such as genetics, age, and cognitive abilities. Any correlation between eye color and reaction time would likely be coincidental rather than causation.
If the skin around your eye is having spasms, this doesn't necessarily mean anything. Sometimes there are muscle twitches that happen all over the body involuntarily.
Yes, the result is a black eye.
If by 'spasms' you mean foot, eye, face, etc. twitches, the cat is almost certainly dreaming. Dogs and cats evidently have vivid dreams but what we see are body twitches and movements.
These are generally called 'ticks' and caused by nerve endings. Generally when the muscle area in the neck is stressed this can cause ticks on the side of the head or even eye problems (eye strain) can cause this. Rub your shoulders with A535 and it should go away. If it continues see an eye specialist.
possibly taking it RIGHT IN THE EYE right in the eye RIGHT IN THE EYE
If the bleeding behind the eye is macular degeneration there is hope! My mom is 92 and is currently undergoing treatment for this condition. There are injections that she receives...also taking MaxiVision vitamins has helped her tremendously.
To read a tuberculin syringe you simply have to look at the calibrations on the syringe. Make sure that your eye is level to avoid taking a wrong reading as a result of parallax.
Eye spasms, or eye twitching, can happen for a variety of reasons. Some common triggers include: stress, fatigue, eyestrain, caffeine, alcohol, dry eyes, poor nutrition, and allergies. Below is a link to AllAboutVision.com's article related to eye twitching for more information.
Melanin.