Around ten percent of our population feels severely reduced in their quality of life due to dry or watery eyes. The symptoms include tired eyes, a foreign body sensation, a feeling of sand in the eyes, scratching, redness of the eyes, burning, blinding (sensitivity to light), swollen or sticky eyelids. Increased tears are also often an expression of dryness, especially when cold or after a gust of wind. The symptoms of dry eyes increase due to wearing contact lenses, working at computer or night, and with increasing age.
The tear fluid that moisturizes the eye is produced by the lacrimal gland and released as a watery tear film into the upper conjunctival sac. In a healthy eye, this watery tear film is evenly covered by an oil film. This oil film is produced by the meibomian glands in the eyelid margins and released onto the surface of the eye with every blink of the eye. A complete and intact oil film protects the tear film from evaporation and keeps the surface of the cornea moist and smooth.
The mechanism of dry or watery eyes is well known and usually depends heavily on the state of the meibomian glands and on the flora on the edges of the eyelids. Clogged meibomian glands (meibomian dysfunction) and eyelid inflammation due to bacterial or demodex mites (blepharitis) disrupt the oily protective film and the tear fluid evaporates quickly. As a result, the surface of the eye dries out and cold or drafts can lead to a typical paradoxical overreaction of the lacrimal gland with pronounced lacrimation.
We now know that age, sex hormones, diet and certain skin diseases play an important role in the development of the so-called Sicca syndrome. However, the exact cause is not fully understood. Quite often, eyelid inflammation can lead to hail or barley lead.
The optimal approach is a proven step-by-step principle, where therapy can be gradually intensified:
Depending on the severity of the meibomian gland dysfunction of the inflammation, different medications are used after treatment
In these diseases, eye dryness or eyelid inflammation is particularly severe and requires special measures accordingly:
More rarely, the cause of dry eyes is not due to the meibomian glands, which influence the quality of the tear film, but to the lacrimal glands, which produce too little tear fluid. In this case, we speak of a so-called Sjögren's syndrome.
This is a rheumatic systemic disease where all mucous membranes are affected by dryness. Cyclosporin eye drops and punctum plugs help here. Close cooperation with a rheumatologist is beneficial in cases of pronounced Sjögren's syndrome with systemic involvement.
Other minimally invasive methods help to reduce the outflow of reduced tear fluid so that tears stay on the eyes longer: