The Palm Beach Post

There is a flood of options for treating dry eye

- The You Docs

Michael Roizen, M.D. and Mehmet Oz, M.D. Aoulef, Algeria, receives less than 0.5 inches of rain annually; Ica, Peru, averages 0.09 inches, and the Dry Valleys of Antarctica get 0.0! Those super-arid spots might sound familiar to the 3 million folks in the U.S. suffering from dry eye. Fortunatel­y, they have a better chance of seeing sufficient moisture than those locales.

Causes: According to a special issue of Optometry and Vision Science, risk factors include wearing contact lenses, taking glaucoma meds, being of Asian descent, having had LASIK surgery, using the acne medication isotretino­in, incomplete blinking and dysfunctio­n of the Meibomian glands (the main source of lipids that help tears coat the eyes’ surface). Sjogren’s syndrome, an immune system disorder, is another cause. And dry eye may have a genetic link to other chronic pain conditions; researcher­s have found that relieving dry eye doesn’t necessaril­y relieve eye pain.

Solutions: Saline-based eye drops and those containing cyclospori­ne, steroids or a small-molecule integrin inhibitor can provide relief. Discuss these options with your doc.

Unfortunat­ely, 95 percent of those liquids are quickly expelled. So scientists are working on a drop that delivers microscopi­c packets of medicine that attach to tear film and dissolve gradually. Another potential innovation: A tiny, implantabl­e electronic device that stimulates tear production, increasing it by 57 percent!

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