(Credit: © stock.adobe.com)
In a Nutshell
- A man in his 20s pressed a percussive massage gun directly on and around both eyes weekly for three months to ease eye tiredness, and it tore both retinas.
- Doctors found multiple retinal tears in both eyes plus retinal dialysis, a sight-threatening separation at the retina’s edge, in his right eye.
- Laser treatment sealed the damage, and his vision held steady at the six-month check because he sought care soon after symptoms started.
A young man in Scotland spent three months pressing a muscle-recovery gadget straight against his eyes, sure it would ease the tired, heavy feeling behind them. By the time he walked into an eye clinic, both eyes carried multiple retinal tears, and his right eye had a serious separation at the edge of the retina.
Percussive massage guns, the handheld, pistol-shaped devices that pound sore muscles after a workout, have become a fixture in gyms and living rooms. They sit on store shelves next to protein powder and show up as holiday gifts, bought and used by ordinary people without any professional guidance. A new medical case report from Edinburgh, published in the journal BMJ Case Reports, shows what can go wrong when one of these powerful tools gets anywhere near the eyes.
After weeks of this routine, flashes of light started appearing in his right eye, and he finally sought help. Doctors found extensive damage to the light-sensitive tissue at the back of both eyes, and their report is the first in medical literature to describe torn retinas in both eyes alongside retinal dialysis, a dangerous separation of that tissue, tied to massage gun use.
What Doctors Found After a Massage Gun Met the Eyes
At the Princess Alexandra Eye Pavilion in Edinburgh, the patient also described about six days of floaters, those shadowy specks that drift across a person’s vision. He reported no head injury and no accident. His eyesight tested as sharp in both eyes, and he wore glasses only for mild nearsightedness.
A closer look at the back of his eyes told a more worrying story. Doctors found multiple tears in the delicate lining inside the eye, widespread bruising of that lining in both eyes, and, in the right eye, a spot where retinal tissue had begun pulling away from its edge, a condition called retinal dialysis. His left eye carried six small horseshoe-shaped tears spread across two areas.
That kind of separation usually follows a hard blow, a punch or a sports collision, and ranks as a serious, sight-threatening injury. When the eye is subjected to a sudden squeeze, the eyeball briefly bulges, creating tearing forces where the retinal lining meets the back of the eye. Something similar seems to have happened here, the authors propose, except the harm built up slowly over weeks of repeated vibration pressed straight onto the eyeball instead of arriving in one violent instant.
A Detail the Patient Held Back
He never mentioned the massage gun at first. Only after the initial exam turned up damage with no obvious cause did physicians circle back with sharper questions, and, with clear reluctance, he explained what he had been doing. His account: running the device around and directly on both eyes, once a week for several minutes, over roughly three months, to quiet a feeling of eye strain. By his own memory, he had not spotted any warning in the instructions against using it near the eyes, though that reflects his recollection rather than a confirmed check of the manual.
That point reaches well past this one patient. Instructions for massage guns differ from brand to brand, and the authors want clearer, more consistent warnings against holding these devices near the eyes.
How Massage Gun Eye Injuries Get Treated
Doctors sealed the tears in both eyes with laser treatment, which builds a controlled scar barrier around damaged spots so they cannot spread or let the retina detach completely. The dialysis in the right eye got the same laser approach. Six months on, his condition held steady, with no worsening of the separation and no clouding of the lens.
Timing worked in his favor. By the figures cited in the report, dialysis like his carries an estimated 8 to 15 percent chance of leading to a full retinal detachment, the kind that can take sight for good. He came in soon after symptoms began, and the authors credit that quick response for preserving his vision.
Only a handful of eye injuries from massage guns have reached medical journals. One involved a man in his late sixties left with a dislocated lens and rising eye pressure, still without a replacement lens months after surgery. Another described a man in his 20s who waited two months as his vision faded and turned out to have cataracts, a shrunken eye, and a detached retina. A third patient recovered fully from a massage-gun cataract. This Edinburgh patient stands apart as the only one with dialysis and tears in both eyes at once, and his vision was preserved despite the high-risk injury.
One more detail pointed back to the gun. The dialysis sat in an unusual part of the eye compared with typical injuries, which the authors link to force applied straight to the front of the eye rather than a knock to the bony rim around it.
What the Massage Gun Case Means for Users
Percussive massage devices are marketed mainly for muscle soreness and workout recovery, and the science on how well they perform is still young. Around the face, though, they carry a danger that rarely comes labeled on the box. A tool built to hammer thick muscle has no business pressed against something as fragile as an eye.
Disclaimer: This article summarizes a single published medical case report and is for general information only. It is not medical advice. A case report describes one patient and cannot establish how common an outcome is or predict what would happen to anyone else. Anyone experiencing floaters, flashes of light, or sudden vision changes should contact an eye care professional promptly.
Paper Notes
Limitations
Only one patient is described here, a single case report, so its findings cannot be applied to the general public. Reports like it exist to document unusual or instructive events, not to establish patterns or statistics. The authors themselves caution that such reports “should not be used in isolation to guide treatment choices or public health policy.” Because the patient was hesitant to disclose his massage gun use, some details of how he used the device may be incomplete.
Funding and Disclosures
No specific grant was reported from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors. No competing interests were declared. Consent for publication was obtained directly from the patient.
Publication Details
Authors: Niamh O’Connell and Ashraf Khan, Ophthalmology, Princess Alexandra Eye Pavilion, Edinburgh, UK
Paper Title: “Bilateral retinal tears and dialysis: a rare complication of percussive massage gun use”
Journal: BMJ Case Reports
Published: 18 June 2026 (accepted 19 May 2026)
Citation: O’Connell N, Khan A. BMJ Case Rep 2026;19:e264566.







