It has been a while since I've posted here and wanted to tell a little bit about my story, somewhat as a satire or maybe a commentary on my profession, which is health care. I've been involved in headache/face pain clinics for over thirty years and now am the director of one. So what I've learned through my dry eye experience helps me relate to the frustration of patients when they come to see me with their headache problems.
My dry eye story started when I was 18-19 (I am now 57). It is hard to connect the dots and that's not important. I just know that I had a powerful chemical eye burn when a fellow-high school student threw chlorine (for the swimming pool) in my eyes as a joke. My present ophthalmologist says it is not related. However, I had to say home for a couple of days when the mucosal membrane peeled off underneath my eye lids and my eyes were swollen shut for a few days. Immediately afterwards I started to suffer from what I now know as chronic dry eyes. My mom took me from ophthalmologist to ophthalmologist looking for help. The only help I got was when I went on steroid drops but I couldn't stay on them. Finally the ophthalmologist told my mom that I was just attention getting . . . so I shut up about the pain for the next few decades.
Then three years ago, overnight, my discomfort when from a daily irritation to the number one problem in my life with constant burning like fire and tears always flowing down my cheeks. (I'm sure you can relate).
I saw a ophthalmologist here who (based on many things I haven't talked about here) diagnosed me with CDE related to Sjogren's Syndrome. I do have joint pain but it is pale in comparison to my eye troubles. He told me that there wasn't much that could be done for me.
I asked to try Restatis (paying about $150/month out of pocket). I stayed on it for 8 months with about a 40% improvement at first . . . then none. We did 4 pugs . . . 20% benefit. I started to use OTC gel every 30 - 60 minutes and that is helpful. I did the fish oil routine with no clear help.
I asked to try Lacricets. They were more trouble than they were worth. First it is a FB sensation for a hour until they melt. Then it feels pretty good for about 2-3 hours, then it because this gooey mess that I couldn't see through.
I went back to my gel, plus I bought a pair of Wiley (with the foam ring) sunglasses, which helps a lot.
I talked to my ophthalmologist about scleral lens he smirked. He said he could try some large contacts that are thick. We messed around with them for about three months. The problem with them is that they work well for a few hours . . . but several times they adhere to my cornea and hurt like hell. Then I can't get them out and when I do, I must scratch my cornea because it will hurt for a few days. I'm about ready to give up on them.
So I was thinking . . . the thing that helps me most are my Wiley sunglasses. If I only had a pair of indoor glasses that protected my eyes from air flow (sort of like a moisture chamber) it would be a big help. Now I see fine up close but need a prescription for distance (Myopia). So my idea was a pair of indoor glasses (where I don't look like Ray Charles) that protects the eyes, but with a bifocal that is neutral in the lower, close up area so I could leave them on. Right now I have to take my glasses off any time I use a computer, which is about a 1,000 per day.
Here is where the satire begins.
So, I went to our largest optical shop to see what I could find. When I tried to explain what I was looking for, she started to frown.
Lady: "Do you work out in the wind on a rooftop or something?"
Me: "No! I work in an office."
Lady: "That makes no sense. Why would you need glasses to block the wind if you are indoors?"
Me: "Because I have Sjogren's Syndrome and I have extremely dry eyes and I need something to protect my eyes from airflow and to keep moisture near my eyes."
Lady, now looking angry at me. "That is just crazy. You don't use glasses to treat dry eyes. That's what eye drops are for. Have you ever tried eye drops?"
I bit my tongue and left.
Then I searched online until I found a pair of glasses that were stylish and offered a little protection (Oakley B 6), plus I have a plan on how to create a clear latex moisture barrier in them. I went to order them and I explained that I wanted a neutral bifocal lens so I wouldn't have to take them off to read up close. They said I had to have permission from my eye doctor (new Rx with bifocal = plano or the opposite of my Rx).
I called my ophthalmologist and spoke to the tech who said what I was saying made no sense. She put the optician on the phone.
Optician: "What do you want?"
I explained as I did to the previous lady at the other store.
Optician: "That makes no sense at all. You don't use glasses to treat dry eyes and bifocals don't help dry eyes. I have no idea where you heard that bifocals help dry eyes but that is not true at all."
So, she totally missed my point and both of them made me feel like I was a nut job.
So, I'm so thankful that I've learned to listen to my patients and to try and understand what they are trying to tell me.
In the end, I forged my glasses Rx with my proper correction at the top and I negated that correction at the bottom to have a clear lens. Now, I hope I can create my moisture chamber and be able to leave my glasses on when I look at distance and close up, protecting my eyes from as much air as I can. Does this make sense to anyone here? I think you would understand better than they did.
My dry eye story started when I was 18-19 (I am now 57). It is hard to connect the dots and that's not important. I just know that I had a powerful chemical eye burn when a fellow-high school student threw chlorine (for the swimming pool) in my eyes as a joke. My present ophthalmologist says it is not related. However, I had to say home for a couple of days when the mucosal membrane peeled off underneath my eye lids and my eyes were swollen shut for a few days. Immediately afterwards I started to suffer from what I now know as chronic dry eyes. My mom took me from ophthalmologist to ophthalmologist looking for help. The only help I got was when I went on steroid drops but I couldn't stay on them. Finally the ophthalmologist told my mom that I was just attention getting . . . so I shut up about the pain for the next few decades.
Then three years ago, overnight, my discomfort when from a daily irritation to the number one problem in my life with constant burning like fire and tears always flowing down my cheeks. (I'm sure you can relate).
I saw a ophthalmologist here who (based on many things I haven't talked about here) diagnosed me with CDE related to Sjogren's Syndrome. I do have joint pain but it is pale in comparison to my eye troubles. He told me that there wasn't much that could be done for me.
I asked to try Restatis (paying about $150/month out of pocket). I stayed on it for 8 months with about a 40% improvement at first . . . then none. We did 4 pugs . . . 20% benefit. I started to use OTC gel every 30 - 60 minutes and that is helpful. I did the fish oil routine with no clear help.
I asked to try Lacricets. They were more trouble than they were worth. First it is a FB sensation for a hour until they melt. Then it feels pretty good for about 2-3 hours, then it because this gooey mess that I couldn't see through.
I went back to my gel, plus I bought a pair of Wiley (with the foam ring) sunglasses, which helps a lot.
I talked to my ophthalmologist about scleral lens he smirked. He said he could try some large contacts that are thick. We messed around with them for about three months. The problem with them is that they work well for a few hours . . . but several times they adhere to my cornea and hurt like hell. Then I can't get them out and when I do, I must scratch my cornea because it will hurt for a few days. I'm about ready to give up on them.
So I was thinking . . . the thing that helps me most are my Wiley sunglasses. If I only had a pair of indoor glasses that protected my eyes from air flow (sort of like a moisture chamber) it would be a big help. Now I see fine up close but need a prescription for distance (Myopia). So my idea was a pair of indoor glasses (where I don't look like Ray Charles) that protects the eyes, but with a bifocal that is neutral in the lower, close up area so I could leave them on. Right now I have to take my glasses off any time I use a computer, which is about a 1,000 per day.
Here is where the satire begins.
So, I went to our largest optical shop to see what I could find. When I tried to explain what I was looking for, she started to frown.
Lady: "Do you work out in the wind on a rooftop or something?"
Me: "No! I work in an office."
Lady: "That makes no sense. Why would you need glasses to block the wind if you are indoors?"
Me: "Because I have Sjogren's Syndrome and I have extremely dry eyes and I need something to protect my eyes from airflow and to keep moisture near my eyes."
Lady, now looking angry at me. "That is just crazy. You don't use glasses to treat dry eyes. That's what eye drops are for. Have you ever tried eye drops?"
I bit my tongue and left.
Then I searched online until I found a pair of glasses that were stylish and offered a little protection (Oakley B 6), plus I have a plan on how to create a clear latex moisture barrier in them. I went to order them and I explained that I wanted a neutral bifocal lens so I wouldn't have to take them off to read up close. They said I had to have permission from my eye doctor (new Rx with bifocal = plano or the opposite of my Rx).
I called my ophthalmologist and spoke to the tech who said what I was saying made no sense. She put the optician on the phone.
Optician: "What do you want?"
I explained as I did to the previous lady at the other store.
Optician: "That makes no sense at all. You don't use glasses to treat dry eyes and bifocals don't help dry eyes. I have no idea where you heard that bifocals help dry eyes but that is not true at all."
So, she totally missed my point and both of them made me feel like I was a nut job.
So, I'm so thankful that I've learned to listen to my patients and to try and understand what they are trying to tell me.
In the end, I forged my glasses Rx with my proper correction at the top and I negated that correction at the bottom to have a clear lens. Now, I hope I can create my moisture chamber and be able to leave my glasses on when I look at distance and close up, protecting my eyes from as much air as I can. Does this make sense to anyone here? I think you would understand better than they did.
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