Here's a step-by-step overview for conducting a scientifically valid self-experiment at home, specifically aimed at identifying dietary supplements that may help you achieve and maintain healthy intraocular pressure (IOP). The methodology ensures rigor, validity, and actionable results.
If you are new to using the scientific method, you may want to read some supplementary information, and/or ask follow-up questions (which you can do below this post or on the FitEyes email list) after reading the steps below.
1. Clearly Define Your Objective
Establish your goal explicitly.
Example: "I aim to identify dietary supplements that consistently lower or help maintain a healthy intraocular pressure (IOP) measured using a home tonometer."
2. Choose Your Supplements and Dosage
Consider specific dietary supplements based on reputable scientific literature or clinical studies known to potentially affect IOP.
Consider supplements such as:
- Magnesium (e.g., MitoMAG)
- Omega-3 fatty acids (EPA/DHA)
- Ginkgo biloba
- CBG
- Palmitoylethanolamide (PEAmium)
Here's a full list you can consult for ideas:
Various Natural Compounds of Interest In Supporting Healthy Intraocular Pressure | Ask FitEyes
Define clear dosages and schedules based on existing research or recommendations.
I suggest picking one single supplement or a small synergistic combination of supplements (such as rutin + forskolin, or bilberry + pine bark extract, which have been shown to work together). This approach allows you to see the effect of isolated supplements, and it is the typical scientific approach. The main caveat is that you may miss some synergies found when multiple supplements are combined, and testing one (or a few) at a time takes longer.
3. Establish Measurement Methods and Schedule
Use a reliable home tonometer (such as an iCare HOME 2 or Reichert 7CR) to measure IOP.
- Consistency is key: Measure IOP according to either a time-of-day schedule or an event-based schedule (before and after activities you normally perform daily).
See more details here:
What Are Examples of the Different Approaches to Home Eye Pressure Monitoring? | Ask FitEyes
- Establish baseline: Spend at least 7-10 days (longer is better) collecting baseline measurements without taking the supplement(s) you plan to test. Record multiple daily readings.
4. Experimental Design
Employ a simple yet robust study design such as:
A-B-A Design (Baseline → Intervention → Washout):
Phase | Duration | Procedure |
---|---|---|
A | 7-10+ days | Baseline measurements (no supplements) |
B | 30-60+ days | Supplement phase (treatment) |
A | 30 days | Washout (stop supplement, back to baseline) |
If you wish to test multiple supplements, do so sequentially (one at a time), separated by a washout phase to eliminate carryover effects.
Ideally, maintain stable lifestyle factors (diet, sleep, physical activity) throughout all phases to minimize confounding variables.
5. Data Collection
Maintain a detailed daily log including:
- Date and time of each measurement.
- IOP readings.
- Supplement details (type, dosage, timing).
- Relevant lifestyle factors (sleep duration, hydration, physical activity, stress levels).
- Any additional notes (side effects, unusual conditions).
Example daily log entry:
Date | Time | IOP #1 | IOP #2 | Average IOP | Supplement | Dosage | Sleep | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2025-03-21 | 08:00 | 17 | 18 | 17.5 mmHg | Magnesium BHB | 400mg | 7 hrs | Slight headache, good hydration |
6. Analysis of Results
At the end of each experimental phase:
- Group your IOP measurements into daily buckets and compute a mean for each bucket. (Details of the bucket method are beyond the scope of this overview document, but the concept is to divide each day into equal length blocks, and treat each block as a single IOP value to average to obtain the day's overall IOP.)
- Compute the average, median, and range of your daily IOP readings (ideally, using the buckets method).
- Visually graph your daily average IOP measurements (line charts recommended) to identify trends.
- Compare your intervention periods with baseline and washout phases to assess significant differences.
- Simple statistical methods (available in most spreadsheet programs) can help confirm statistically meaningful differences. But visual inspection is often enough.
Criteria for a successful supplement:
Significant reduction in IOP during the supplement phase compared to baseline and washout.
Consistency across multiple measurement points.
7. Interpretation and Conclusions
Interpret your data carefully:
Confirm reproducibility: A second round of testing the same supplement can validate your initial findings. This is highly recommended!
Consider placebo effects: The washout phase helps control for potential placebo effects.
Account for external factors: Document any confounding factors clearly to interpret results accurately.
8. Document and Share Findings
For increased scientific validity and value:
Document clearly your method, results, and conclusions in an organized report or notebook.
If comfortable, share your data with healthcare providers or relevant patient/research communities (such as FitEyes.com) to gain valuable insights or peer reviews.
9. Safety and Ethical Considerations
- Consult a healthcare provider who has knowledge of dietary supplements.
- Immediately stop and consult medical help if experiencing adverse effects.
- Never make drastic changes to medication or medical treatment without consulting a qualified professional.
Example Timeline:
- Day 1–10: Baseline IOP (no supplements)
- Day 11–70: Magnesium BHB (400 mg/day)
Day 71–100: Washout (no supplements)
Repeat: as needed, to confirm the results
By following this structured approach, you can perform a scientifically rigorous, insightful self-experiment at home, allowing for personalized discovery of dietary supplements beneficial to maintaining a healthy intraocular pressure.
Great post, will use it! However, I would like to ask how to interpret the following situation:
Taking 3 measurements (6 small icare hits x 3 times) produces 16mmhg, 15mmhg, 12mmhg at the same eye. What do one understands from it? (consider I'm doing it without any time off, it's 3 in a row)
Thanks!
Record all three IOP values (with the time stamps). You'll record 16, 15, and 12 for that eye, with each measurement a few seconds or a minute apart.
There are several different phases of this research:
As an example, I found out that my IOP can go from 15 or 16 to 12 almost instantly just by relaxing the muscles in my face. Maybe you are slightly tense on the first measurements and finally relax a bit. The tension in the muscle is very subtle and hard to notice. Without IOP monitoring you might never realize you have any tension in this area.
Once you have a theory (e.g., "facial muscle tension raises my IOP"), you have to test it very carefully over time to confirm if it is true for you.