In case it hasn't been obnoxiously obvious , I admit here and now that I have been touting the Dr. Holly drops in recent weeks, and simply can't get over how they have changed the course of my disease. Today, I saw my eye doc, and finally got some numbers to report, after a trial of FreshKote and Dwelle over a period of about 7 months.
For about 10 years, my tear break-up time was consistently measured, by many different doctors, to be from 0-1 seconds. Throughout that period, I had to wear moisture chamber glasses 24/7, even in indoor environments with completely still air, due to menthol/windy sensation that made it hard to keep eyes open without protective eyewear. . .I have LOVED my moisture chamber glasses, because they have essentially made living possible, for these years. . .
After about 6 months on Dr. Holly drops (excluding NutraTears, which I have yet to try for a sustained period, though not by itself), I accidentally put on regular glasses for a day, sans moisture chambers. I found that I could go for many hours, this way. . .At 7 months, I am rarely wearing the moisture chambers, though I expect always to need them at some times. . .
Today my doctor measured a tear break-up time that he described as significantly greater than 1 second, and almost "normal-looking". . .I still have dry spots, after a few seconds. . .But the break-up no longer starts instantly after a blink.
Interestingly, my Schirmer scores are very high, now, too. . .but I don't trust Schirmers for good information on tear production, and I have never been severely deficient lacrimally. . .
Anyway. . .Having tried literally DOZENS of different therapies over the years, I never believed change was possible. . .Now I see that it is. . .
The only downer today was that while I raved and raved about the high oncotic pressure Dr. Holly drops, and even handed my doctor literature about them, this kindly, but oblivious, doctor still asked me to try Soothe and Systane. (I tried these years ago, and was, in fact, involved in the Soothe clinical trials, where I was pronounced a bad candidate for the product. . .Soothe was awful for me, even though I have MGD. Systane was nice, but not therapeutic.) I also found the literature that I'd given the doc inside my patient file, as I left the office. . .evidence that he will not be reading it. . .
Crazily, the doctor said to me "You know more about the composition and physiological effects of artificial tears than do most cornea specialists." He then proceeded not to care at all what kind of drop he tells patients to put in to their eyes. . .I'll stick with this doctor, because he is well meaning and a brilliant surgeon and ocular surface expert, but I'm on my own with treatment. . .
The whole experience makes me worry that there seems to be little motivation, in ophthalmologists and optometrists, to see whether eyedrops can be THERAPEUTIC, and not just soothing. . .I want to do something to change this, but I'm not sure how. . .
For about 10 years, my tear break-up time was consistently measured, by many different doctors, to be from 0-1 seconds. Throughout that period, I had to wear moisture chamber glasses 24/7, even in indoor environments with completely still air, due to menthol/windy sensation that made it hard to keep eyes open without protective eyewear. . .I have LOVED my moisture chamber glasses, because they have essentially made living possible, for these years. . .
After about 6 months on Dr. Holly drops (excluding NutraTears, which I have yet to try for a sustained period, though not by itself), I accidentally put on regular glasses for a day, sans moisture chambers. I found that I could go for many hours, this way. . .At 7 months, I am rarely wearing the moisture chambers, though I expect always to need them at some times. . .
Today my doctor measured a tear break-up time that he described as significantly greater than 1 second, and almost "normal-looking". . .I still have dry spots, after a few seconds. . .But the break-up no longer starts instantly after a blink.
Interestingly, my Schirmer scores are very high, now, too. . .but I don't trust Schirmers for good information on tear production, and I have never been severely deficient lacrimally. . .
Anyway. . .Having tried literally DOZENS of different therapies over the years, I never believed change was possible. . .Now I see that it is. . .
The only downer today was that while I raved and raved about the high oncotic pressure Dr. Holly drops, and even handed my doctor literature about them, this kindly, but oblivious, doctor still asked me to try Soothe and Systane. (I tried these years ago, and was, in fact, involved in the Soothe clinical trials, where I was pronounced a bad candidate for the product. . .Soothe was awful for me, even though I have MGD. Systane was nice, but not therapeutic.) I also found the literature that I'd given the doc inside my patient file, as I left the office. . .evidence that he will not be reading it. . .
Crazily, the doctor said to me "You know more about the composition and physiological effects of artificial tears than do most cornea specialists." He then proceeded not to care at all what kind of drop he tells patients to put in to their eyes. . .I'll stick with this doctor, because he is well meaning and a brilliant surgeon and ocular surface expert, but I'm on my own with treatment. . .
The whole experience makes me worry that there seems to be little motivation, in ophthalmologists and optometrists, to see whether eyedrops can be THERAPEUTIC, and not just soothing. . .I want to do something to change this, but I'm not sure how. . .
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