Today, I'm diving into a real discussion on Demodex mites and how they cause redness and irritation to your eyelashes. Yes, you heard that right! These microscopic critters love to make themselves at home in your eyelids and lashes, and you probably never even knew it. Let's talk about the Demodex mite who too small to see with the naked eye.
The demodex mite lives on the lash follicles of your eyes. Everyone has a few of these tiny party crashers living on our lids and lashes. It's perfectly normal! Learn more about this condition, Demodex blepharitis, here.
But here's the kicker: sometimes, these uninvited guests become over populated on your eyelashes, and that can lead to symptoms like irritation, redness, watering, lash thickening...
Have you heard about using scleral contact lenses when you have dry eye disease? They're a great idea for dry eye sufferers. Let's review three reasons why scleral lenses work well for patients who have dry eye disease.
#1) The Shape of a Scleral Lens
Scleral lenses are a little larger than a soft contact lens. The lens goes over your eye from the white part of the eye, sclera, to the other side just like a soft contact lens would. But, the difference with a scleral contact lens is its rigid material.
The rigid material gives the lens a fish bowl shape that vaults over the front of your eye. You fill the lens with sterile saline solution. Then when you put it on your eye, the saline bathes your eye in moisture all day long.
The lenses work really well to keep your eyes lubricated an...
This is week three of the 3 myths of dry eye disease. If you've missed the other 2 myths, be sure to check out the other blogs: Myth 1 and Myth 2.
If you've been Keeping up with the other myths, then you already know that this myth is wrong. There's so many things you can do to treat dry eyes, and some of them are very new. If you've been following me for a while, then you know that I always talk about the four parts to treat dry eye, which is E Y E S. The EYES method gives four pillars of dry eye disease treatment.
Pillar #1) EYES
Step #1 is to treat your eyes. I like to talk about 4-simple steps to treat your dry eyes:
In the clinic, I get asked this question all day long, "What's causing my eyes to be so dry?" The short answer is that dry eye is multifactorial. It comes from many different causes. Some of the things we have no control over, like your gender and your age. Women, especially those over 40, are more likely to have dry eye than men. And, we can't change our gender or age. But, there are a ton of causes of dry eye that we can control.
Let's talk about what you can take care or change to help our dry eyes. I like to break this down into three parts. I called it the EYE Method. The first is E for Eyes. The Y is for Your Health. And, the final E is for the Environment.
This week, we will take a deep dive into how your environment helps effects your dry eyes.
Th...
In the clinic, I get asked this question all day long, "What's causing my eyes to be so dry?" The short answer is that dry eye is multifactorial. It comes from many different causes. Some of the things we have no control over, like your gender and your age. Women, especially those over 40, are more likely to have dry eye than men. And, we can't change our gender or age. But, there are a ton of causes of dry eye that we can control.
Let's talk about what you can take care or change to help our dry eyes. I like to break this down into three parts. I called it the EYE Method. The first is E for eyes. The Y is for Your Health. And, the final E is for the Environment.
Let's look at each part. Last week, I dove in to how the Eyes play a role in causing dry eye disease. If you missed it,...
If you have been hanging around with me for a while now, then you know that I preach the same rules over and over and over again. In the past couple of weeks, I've been in the car a lot. So, I've had some thinking time. I started to re-evaluate my hard and fast rules.
I went to a funeral and a wedding in the same 10 day time span. To say the least, there was a bit of crying going on. And, it provided an opportunity for me to reevaluate some of the rules that I preach.
I would like to review these 4 dry eye rules. Normally I'm quite the rule follower, but I had some reassessment time. And, it turns out that there are times when it's okay to break the rules. Let me tell you when you can break three of them. Then, I'll explain why you can never, ever, ever, ever, ever break one of them....
One of the biggest complaints my dry eye patients talk to me about is redness. Across the board, no matter their age or gender, patients hate having red eyes. It's just embarrassing. And, in truth, other people do notice when your eyes are red.
Let's face it, the eyes are the windows to your soul. And although rose colored glasses may give you a sunnier disposition, rose colored eyes do not. There is no beauty in red eyes. And, we don't like the story that red eyes tend to relate about activities we may have engaged in the night before.
Instead let's concentrate on how to make your dry eyes white again. This week especially, only a few days before Easter, you don't want to be mistaken for an Easter bunny.
Well, dry eye is driven by inf...
Next week is the official start of Spring. Woohoo!
I couldn't wait for this day to get here. As a dry eye sufferer myself, I have a harder time dealing with artificial heat and that lack of moisture in the air than I do with pollen.
However, if you're an allergy sufferer, you may be hiding inside today. I want to go over three ways to help you wear your contact lenses during the spring season. The three ways to continue wearing contact lenses even though it's allergy season are: prevent, cleanse and dispose.
No. 1) Prevent
Prevent the pollen from getting in your eyes. You could do this as simply as wearing sunglasses. This would mean that any time you're outdoors, you wear sunglasses. Utilizing a style with side shields would prevent wind, pollen, and dust from getting into your eye...
Happy Mari Gras!
It's Mardi Gras season here in Louisiana. And, Mardi Gras season gives the folks here in Louisiana one more thing to celebrate. There are parties, parades, masquerade balls, and lots of fun to be had. Everyone likes to get dressed up for it and wear beaded necklaces and fun masks.
Since there is a lot of masquerading going on, it's the perfect time to talk about an eye condition that often masquerades as dry eyes - seasonal allergies. Or, I should say that allergies sometimes aren't the cause of your symptoms and it's really dry eye that's the underlying problem.
My patients often come in to see me and talk to me about symptoms of redness and watering. Then, they down play the symptoms by stating, "It's just my allergies". That's how it masquerades. A symptom that...
This week, I'm going to talk to you about something that probably, you never thought someone from Louisiana would teach you about. It's something called snow blindness. It can occur when you go outdoors and you enjoy yourself for the day when there's snow on the ground and you didn't protect your eyes properly.
When we go outdoors on a cold day I'm sure you've put on your long Johns, so your legs will be nice and warm. You put on your winter boots, you put on your coat, you put on your hood, you put on your gloves, and finally you go outside and you enjoy yourself all day. You've protected your body, but you forgot one crucial thing because maybe it was also cloudy. You didn't wear eye protection with an Ultra Violet (UV) blocker.
And the next day, when you wake up, your eyes are r...
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