This is my first post so hello all! I am studying this very helpful website in small amounts and best wishes to you all in managing your dry eye.
I’m going to try and keep my story / question simple by ignoring plugs, goggles and drops and apologies if this is similar to a question already posted, if so please direct me and I will read the previous responses! Here goes.
I may have had an ‘underlying medical eye condition’ but if so I was unaware of it. I had been wearing contact lenses day in day out with no problem, doing my job and everything else I wanted to do without thinking twice about it.
I stared a different job with my employer, it was fairly similar to what I had been doing before but with a slightly higher amount of screen use and a different position in the office which may have meant more noticeable air conditioning. Within a few days of starting the new job it became apparent there was a problem as extreme eye pain flared up in my left eye making it difficult to concentrate. I was very sure the change of job and the air conditioning were the cause of the pain because it went once I was out of the building. Among other things, I stopped wearing contact lenses.
A year later things had got worse, I could now feel both my eyes dry out within a short time of arriving in work and they stayed that way all day which was really uncomfortable and pain could build up. Once out of work I could start to feel moisture in my eyes again, but maybe not as much as before. For reasons of comfort I stopped things like book reading and using the internet.
Two years later I developed all sorts of generalised issues such as headaches, backache and a neck spasm. Also facial rosacea which ‘seems to flare up in the workplace’. My eyeballs were full of broken capillaries. My eyes still felt reasonable once I was into a period of annual leave.
Three years later my eye margins had really started to itch in work. Some crusting had started to happen. The next thing was that the eye margins started to go bright red in work but again the redness went once I was out of the building. I had started to wake up to some very interesting eyelid shapes.
Four years later my eye margins were red all the time. My job happened to be changed so I was working with a computer screen positioned to my left hand side meaning I was looking to the left all the time and my outer right eye rim started hurting like anything. A divot appeared in this part of the eye rim which seems to match the description of ‘gland drop out’. My eyes now felt dry all the time. The eye margins continue to react especially badly to air conditioning, windy weather and start ‘fizzing’ within the first few moments of trying to use a computer screen.
By the time I’d stopped working in that job I finally managed to get a Shirmer I test which showed zero tear production in each of my eyes over 5 minutes (a Schirmer II test also very low). I was told this was an extreme result but that the tear film I do have is holding together well which could be why the extent of the problem hasn’t been identified before. It was told it could be Primary Sjogren’s Syndrome although my feeling is not since I have no other symptoms of Sjogren’s and also a year after leaving the job, my left eye had several days of watering uncontrollably all day (leaving salt all over face!) a few days apart each time and then stopped and it has never happened again – doubtful this would be able to happen with Sjogrens? This is as much diagnosis as I have at this time although at various stages in the previous years I was told I had ‘mild anterior blepharitis’ and my optician told me I had ‘partially blocked and slow meibomian glands’ besides the rosacea that developed later. From what I have read it seems I now have fairly severe MGD.
The employer has always said and continues to very confidently say that the work environment has had nothing to do with eye condition which they say would all have happened anyway. They also say I would have a hard time proving that the eye problem was causing anxiety or a loss of concentration (which baffles me). I am very sure that if I had not been doing that job in that environment my eyes would not be like this now. It felt like a period of intense or accelerated ageing leaving me with a result that may have taken two or three decades to reach otherwise. As I said, I am not going into the various ‘interventions’ I tried but leaving that job may have been the best move!
My questions are, are there any circumstances where prolonged exposure to adverse conditions could cause a lacrimal gland disorder? If not and I had some sort of pre-existing lacrimal gland deficiency, could the on-going adverse conditions and strain of the eyes trying to cope, make it get worse? Could the adverse conditions have caused the secondary issues such as advanced MGD? Assuming there was very little medical monitoring or information given to me in the early years, does anyone have any thoughts on how I would go about trying to prove this?
I’m going to try and keep my story / question simple by ignoring plugs, goggles and drops and apologies if this is similar to a question already posted, if so please direct me and I will read the previous responses! Here goes.
I may have had an ‘underlying medical eye condition’ but if so I was unaware of it. I had been wearing contact lenses day in day out with no problem, doing my job and everything else I wanted to do without thinking twice about it.
I stared a different job with my employer, it was fairly similar to what I had been doing before but with a slightly higher amount of screen use and a different position in the office which may have meant more noticeable air conditioning. Within a few days of starting the new job it became apparent there was a problem as extreme eye pain flared up in my left eye making it difficult to concentrate. I was very sure the change of job and the air conditioning were the cause of the pain because it went once I was out of the building. Among other things, I stopped wearing contact lenses.
A year later things had got worse, I could now feel both my eyes dry out within a short time of arriving in work and they stayed that way all day which was really uncomfortable and pain could build up. Once out of work I could start to feel moisture in my eyes again, but maybe not as much as before. For reasons of comfort I stopped things like book reading and using the internet.
Two years later I developed all sorts of generalised issues such as headaches, backache and a neck spasm. Also facial rosacea which ‘seems to flare up in the workplace’. My eyeballs were full of broken capillaries. My eyes still felt reasonable once I was into a period of annual leave.
Three years later my eye margins had really started to itch in work. Some crusting had started to happen. The next thing was that the eye margins started to go bright red in work but again the redness went once I was out of the building. I had started to wake up to some very interesting eyelid shapes.
Four years later my eye margins were red all the time. My job happened to be changed so I was working with a computer screen positioned to my left hand side meaning I was looking to the left all the time and my outer right eye rim started hurting like anything. A divot appeared in this part of the eye rim which seems to match the description of ‘gland drop out’. My eyes now felt dry all the time. The eye margins continue to react especially badly to air conditioning, windy weather and start ‘fizzing’ within the first few moments of trying to use a computer screen.
By the time I’d stopped working in that job I finally managed to get a Shirmer I test which showed zero tear production in each of my eyes over 5 minutes (a Schirmer II test also very low). I was told this was an extreme result but that the tear film I do have is holding together well which could be why the extent of the problem hasn’t been identified before. It was told it could be Primary Sjogren’s Syndrome although my feeling is not since I have no other symptoms of Sjogren’s and also a year after leaving the job, my left eye had several days of watering uncontrollably all day (leaving salt all over face!) a few days apart each time and then stopped and it has never happened again – doubtful this would be able to happen with Sjogrens? This is as much diagnosis as I have at this time although at various stages in the previous years I was told I had ‘mild anterior blepharitis’ and my optician told me I had ‘partially blocked and slow meibomian glands’ besides the rosacea that developed later. From what I have read it seems I now have fairly severe MGD.
The employer has always said and continues to very confidently say that the work environment has had nothing to do with eye condition which they say would all have happened anyway. They also say I would have a hard time proving that the eye problem was causing anxiety or a loss of concentration (which baffles me). I am very sure that if I had not been doing that job in that environment my eyes would not be like this now. It felt like a period of intense or accelerated ageing leaving me with a result that may have taken two or three decades to reach otherwise. As I said, I am not going into the various ‘interventions’ I tried but leaving that job may have been the best move!
My questions are, are there any circumstances where prolonged exposure to adverse conditions could cause a lacrimal gland disorder? If not and I had some sort of pre-existing lacrimal gland deficiency, could the on-going adverse conditions and strain of the eyes trying to cope, make it get worse? Could the adverse conditions have caused the secondary issues such as advanced MGD? Assuming there was very little medical monitoring or information given to me in the early years, does anyone have any thoughts on how I would go about trying to prove this?
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