Daily Mail

Your weepy eyes are actually DRY!

- DR MARTIN SCURR

QMY EYES have been weepy for a year and every morning they are stuck together with a crusty discharge. The optician says I have dry eyes, but I have tried drops, hot pads, massages and eye baths with no improvemen­t.

ACarolyn Williamson, Swansea. While it may sound paradoxica­l that your ‘weepy’ eyes are dry, the diagnosis is probably correct.

Dry eye disease occurs when the mechanism that maintains a stable ‘tear film’ (watery fluid) across the surface of the eye is disturbed.

Around 5 per cent of the population is affected, the problem becoming more common with age.

Other risk factors include hormonal changes (thus women are more often affected), use of contact lenses, a number of medication­s (including oestrogen and some antidepres­sants), and diseases such as diabetes.

The role of the tear film is to protect the eye. it is made up of a complex structure of water, mucus and oil, secreted by three sets of glands.

Poor function of one of these sets of glands — the lacrimal glands, in the corner of each eye — leads to reduced tear production, resulting in a tear film that is over-concentrat­ed (too salty).

This can then cause inflammati­on, as the eye is not sufficient­ly lubricated and protected against the elements.

The condition can also be caused by Sjogren’s syndrome, an autoimmune disease that affects moisture- secreting glands throughout the body — dry mouth is also a symptom.

Poor function or blocking of the oil- secreting meibomian glands along the eyelids can be another cause — this leads to water being more easily lost from the surface of the eye.

Without the oil to act as a barrier, the tear film breaks down, causing your weeping.

The other symptoms you mention in your letter — redness, discharge and crusting — are due to the inflammati­on caused by the eye being insufficie­ntly lubricated.

The eye drops and warm compresses you say you have tried are important and, even if you are not yet noticing any improvemen­t, please continue to use these — as a long-term strategy they will provide relief by ‘softening’ any blockage in the meibomian glands and making the oil more fluid.

Use the drops at least four times each day — it will take several weeks to produce a significan­t improvemen­t in your symptoms.

i also recommend trying a shaped eye pad containing linseeds ( available online), which you can warm in the microwave (be cautious not to overheat the pad — you don’t want to burn your eyelids).

This should be applied for at least ten minutes twice- daily, while lying down.

i always encourage patients to spend the time in a quiet moment of meditation — this might bring additional relief as this condition does cause considerab­le anxiety.

There are other suggestion­s that are thought to contribute to the effective oil production of the meibomian glands, including taking omega-3 fatty acid capsules.

Studies have failed to prove a benefit, but anecdotall­y i have heard good results.

however, i stress that the hot eye pads and lubricant drops used long term and regularly are the key to easing symptoms.

QI AM 68, fit and healthy — but since the menopause started I have needed to go to the loo at least twice a night. When I spoke with my GP, she was very reluctant to prescribe anything.

AName and address supplied. The tissues of the genital area, including the urethra and bladder, are highly dependent on the female hormone oestrogen, which drops during the menopause.

This results in changes to the local anatomy — known these days as genitourin­ary syndrome of the menopause.

Symptoms include dryness, burning and irritation during sex, or urinary symptoms such as urgency, stress incontinen­ce and the nocturia (the need to urinate at night) you describe.

There are drugs that can address these problems: one commonly prescribed group are anti-muscarinic­s, which work by making the ‘smooth muscle’ of the bladder less irritable.

however, side- effects — particular­ly as these are long-term therapies — are a problem.

Rapid heartbeat, acid reflux, difficulty with near vision, urinary retention, dry mouth and constipati­on are all too common, along with crossreact­ing with other medication­s that you might be taking, which likely explains your doctor’s reluctance to prescribe them.

But there is another option, which has none of the troublesom­e issues listed above: local hormone replacemen­t therapy (hRT) — oestrogen in the form of a cream or pessary applied topically to the vulva and vagina only.

This would not be appropriat­e medication if you have a history of oestrogen receptorpo­sitive breast cancer, but otherwise, issues with the treatment are few.

Raise this possibilit­y with your doctor — i have high hopes it will improve your nocturia.

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Picture: GETTY / ISTOCKPHOT­O
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