> Anyone have any experience with this stuff? It's for dry eye:
>
> http://www.clarymist.co.uk/
>
> --Hi Charles,
I've seen a product similar to this in an aerasolized form at several
optometry conventions. If you cannot put an eyedrop directly into the
lower lid (best method) then this will probably increase moisture to
the area around the eyes. Like a mini-humidifier, you'll get an
increase in humidity, but not a good product for women with makeup.
Here is a site with some background and other options:
http://www.agingeye.net/dryeyes/overview.php
Hope this helps,
paul
Charles - 23 Jul 2006 15:25 GMT
> > Anyone have any experience with this stuff? It's for dry eye:
> >
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]
> Hope this helps,
> paul
Good site. Someone on another forum gave the impression that Clarymist
was some newfangled thing, but it seemed about the same as eyedrops to
me, except with a different (weird) delivery. I don't really
understand the point of spraying it on a closed eye, since 99% won't
get in. (?)
--
Go to the website and read the research. If you suffer from evaporative dry eye then the odds are this will help you, infinitely more than any drops or gels.
I work for the importer so have an intimate knowledge of how and why it functions.
Believe me, it's nothing like a mini-humidifier, rathern it replenishes the polar region of the lipid layer in your tear film.
Feel free to ask me any questions you like.
Ton