Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
Home
Discussion Groups
General
GeneralCardiologyVisionDentistryPharmacyLaboratoryNutritionAlternative
Diseases and Disorders
AIDSAlzheimer'sArthritisAsthmaCancerBreast CancerDiabetesEpilepsyGlaucomaHepatitisHerpesLupusProstate BPHProstate CancerProstatitisSinusitisTinnitus

Re: Morning dry eye?

Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.



You are accessing this site in a read-only mode. For full access to all member benefits, including message posting, please login or register. Registration is completely free, simple, and takes only a few seconds.

Login | Free MedKB.com registration | Whole discussion thread

The message you are replying to and its parents are listed in the reverse order with the most recent posts first. This might not be the whole discussion thread. To read all the messages in this thread please click here.

Re: Morning dry eye?

Neil Brooks26 Jun 2006 23:50
>> The tearing you get from irritation from your gas perms is referred
>> to as "reflex tearing" and has no real association with dry or
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>
>Is there anything that can be done with respect to the watering?  

Yup.  All of the aforementioned treatment modalities for dry eye
syndrome.  Here's a good overview:

http://www.agingeye.net/dryeyes/dryeyesdrugtreatment.php

>Or is
>there a chance that it might go away eventually?  

Yup.  Really depends what the underlying cause is, IF that can be
determined.  

I (not a doctor)'d probably pick a decent dry eye drop (maybe Refresh
Endura or Systane) and try it for a few weeks.

That's a bit of the shotgun approach.  Probably a better way (notice
that I'm *still* not a doctor) would be to have a dry eye workup at an
optometrist's office where they check your Schirmer's (quantity of
tears), Tear Break Up Time ("quality" of tears), and rose bengal (or
equivalent) staining (see any evidence of dry eye associated damage on
cornea or conjunctiva).

If you come back to the board with those numbers, I/we/somebody can
tell you if you have dry eyes, whether they're aqueous deficient,
evaporative, or both, and ... if your luck still holds out ... what
the best treatment options are for you!

>I remember my doc
>talking about RGP's with different levels of water absorption - would
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>down the hall.  My eyes have always been like that to some extent, but
>much worse with the contacts.

Sounds like a symptom of dry eyes to me.

I'd get 'em looked at ... for specifically that issue ... by a good
dry eye doc near you.

Best of luck!

Charles26 Jun 2006 23:11

> The tearing you get from irritation from your gas perms is referred
> to as "reflex tearing" and has no real association with dry or
> non-dry eyes. In fact, one of the classic complaints of a dry
> eye patient is of excessive "watering".
>
> frank

Is there anything that can be done with respect to the watering?  Or is
there a chance that it might go away eventually?  I remember my doc
talking about RGP's with different levels of water absorption - would
this have any bearing?

You mention irritation, but my RGP's feel totally comfortable at this
point.  There doesn't seem to be any correlation between felt
irritation and eye watering.  There is, however, a strong correlation
with wind blowing into my eyes, or even the air from walking quickly
down the hall.  My eyes have always been like that to some extent, but
much worse with the contacts.

drfrank21@gmail.com26 Jun 2006 20:48
> For the last few months I've had this thing where the vision in one or
> both of my eyes is foggy when I wake first thing in the morning.  I'm
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>
> --

It does sound like dry eye and I would recommend any number
of good artificial tear products (I get good results from the gels
such as "Refresh Liquigel") on a regular basis at night and first
thing in the morning.

The tearing you get from irritation from your gas perms is referred
to as "reflex tearing" and has no real association with dry or
non-dry eyes. In fact, one of the classic complaints of a dry
eye patient is of excessive "watering".

frank

Charles25 Jun 2006 19:33
For the last few months I've had this thing where the vision in one or
both of my eyes is foggy when I wake first thing in the morning.  I'm
not sure, but which eye is foggy seems to be related to which side I
was sleeping on.  The problem clears in 5 minutes or so, so it's hard
to diagnose.  This morning I put a few lubricant drops in both eyes
right away and it cleared, so I'm thinking dry eye.

Any thoughts on what might have brought this on, and what I can do
about it?  I mentioned it at my last eye exam, but the doc didn't seem
too concerned and suggested drops before bed.  The weird thing is that
I don't think I have dry eyes in general.  Since I got RGP's (about 3-4
weeks ago now), my biggest problem seems to be excessive tearing...
although at times I think I do go dry too.

Quick links:

 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage




©2009 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.