Pressure behind the eyes, difficulty focusing, tenderness around the eye socket, or occasional blurred or double vision — if you've had these alongside jaw symptoms and an eye exam came back clean, the jaw is worth considering as a contributing factor.
Why the jaw and eyes are connected
The trigeminal nerve is the shared wiring here — it's the same major nerve responsible for sensation across the jaw, face, and areas around the eyes. When jaw muscles or the joint itself are inflamed or under chronic tension, that irritation can travel along shared nerve branches and manifest as pain or pressure around the eyes rather than (or in addition to) the jaw.
Muscle tension patterns can compound this: chronically tight jaw and temple muscles often pull on connected tissue around the eye socket, and prolonged muscle tension anywhere in the head can contribute to the kind of dull, hard-to-pin-down ache that gets described as "pressure" or "eye strain."
What to rule out first
Blurred vision and eye pain have plenty of causes that have nothing to do with the jaw: dry eye, uncorrected refractive error, migraine, sinus disease, and eye inflammation among them. A comprehensive eye exam is the right first step — TMJ should be considered when that exam is normal and the visual symptoms track closely with jaw or facial tension.
Signs TMJ may be a contributing factor
- A normal eye exam despite ongoing symptoms
- Eye pressure or blurring that's worse during jaw flares or after clenching
- Accompanying jaw clicking, soreness, or headaches around the temples
- Symptoms that ease somewhat with jaw massage or rest
What may help
Since the mechanism runs through the same overworked jaw and temple muscles involved in tension headaches, our Tension Headache Relief program's trigger point release techniques are a reasonable starting point.