Conditions & treatments

Acute & General Ophthalmology

Comprehensive assessment and management of a wide range of eye conditions

Assessed by a consultant. Fig. C
Acute & general

Seeing the whole picture

Not every eye problem arrives with a diagnosis attached. Many patients simply know that something has changed — vision that isn't right, an eye that is red, sore or watering, or symptoms that come and go. Mr Garg's practice welcomes exactly these situations: comprehensive, consultant-led assessment to find the underlying cause and set out the right plan.

Conditions commonly seen

  • Red or painful eyes
  • Flashes and floaters
  • Sudden loss or disturbance of vision
  • Dry, gritty or watery eyes
  • Sticky eyes and conjunctivitis
  • Double vision
  • Unexplained visual symptoms
  • Eyelid problems
  • Second opinions on diagnosis or treatment
  • New symptoms needing specialist assessment

When should I seek advice?

If something doesn't feel right with your eyes or vision, don't wait for it to become obviously serious. Most eye symptoms turn out to be manageable — but a small number need prompt treatment, and early assessment is the safest way to tell the difference.

If you are unsure, or simply want expert reassurance, you are always welcome.

Mr Anurag Garg, Consultant Ophthalmologist

Mr Garg's experience

As Clinical Lead for the Rapid Access Eye Clinic at St Thomas' Hospital, Mr Garg manages the full spectrum of urgent and general ophthalmic presentations every week, within one of London's busiest eye emergency services.

That tertiary-centre breadth — spanning everything from minor irritations to sight-threatening emergencies — underpins the rapid, accurate diagnosis his patients rely on.

Clinical LeadRapid Access Eye Clinic, St Thomas' Hospital
Weeklyurgent & general ophthalmic care
Tertiaryreferral-centre breadth of experience

Something not feeling right?

Book a consultation — whether you have a referral, a diagnosis, or simply symptoms that need answers.

Book a Consultation