Hi,
My name is Mike and I've been reading the dryeyezone forums for a couple of years now and wanted to start posting to see if I could get some advice on where to get fitted moisture chamber glasses in Australia. Ironically, after having dry eyes for about 6 years they improved dramatically in the last week since registering, so this doubles as an introduction and success story.
So a bit about me, I'm in my late 20s and studying. I started to get dry eyes in my early 20s. It started out as mild and got progressively worse. Three years ago it got to the point where it started to impact on my ability to work on computers when the environment was warm-hot, dry or bright. Over the last few months it got to the point where I thought I might have to drop out of my degree.
The main symptoms I have had are:
- Constantly dry and painful eyes (unless in a cool, dark and humid environment)
- Very tired eyes (not affected by environment)
- Very limited tear production and very fast tear breakdown/evaporation
- possibly contributing: rosacea of the nose and face (so ocular rosacea is a strong possibility)
Treatment approach:
- Over the space of a couple of years (about 3 years ago) I went 3-4 GPs who all recommended either hayfever medication or eye drops which did nothing.
- Two years ago I moved for study and had better access to eye specialists. The first I saw told me that I had "Dry Eye Syndrome", told me to use eyedrops more regularly and put me on Doxycycline with very minimal effect. (I was very unimpressed with this guy but I still saw him about 3 times).
- The second Opthamologist I saw diagnosed me with Ocular Rosacea, kept me going on the Doxy, recommended an eye care plan (sterilid wash, warm compresses, massage, eye drops etc), and recommended I try fish oil supplements. After a few months this approach had not achieved any results and while I thought this guy was quite good I had a 3rd Opthamologist recommended to me which I thought I would try.
- Side note: inbetween Opth No.2 and Opth No.3 I saw a GP who recommended I try Akamin, another type of monocycline.
- Opthamologist number three diagnosed me as having "MILD Blepharitis", gave me a slightly better eye care program and sent me on my way. Also a very unimpressive doctor (he read the letter he was sending back to my GP aloud as he typed it and half of the information was incorrect (why I was on Akamin, my past history of treatment, current treatment etc) it was pretty shocking).
- In the last 6 months or so I found a great GP. Very proactive and willing to put in some extra effort. On his advice I cut the monocyclines and tried a couple of other medications. These didn't work out and he referred me to an allergist. The allergist didn't find anything so, about 10 days ago, he started me on prednisone which I quickly started to taper off and replace with Flixonase. He also screened for auto-immune diseases, including Sjrogens (seriously, how do three opthamologists not do this), which all came back negative.
I should say that at this point (about 10 days ago) I was getting very stressed about my health. My eyes were still getting worse and I was seriously thinking about dropping out of my degree. I was having really severe eye pain and my capacity to do work was really reduced. So I tried looking for some moisture chamber glasses (I found wearing sunglasses inside helpful so I thought that some moisture chamber sunglasses could be helpful) but I couldn't find any that fit!
The other thing I thought I would try was to fix my sleep, exercise, and diet.
I started this last Saturday, by Tuesday SUCCESS! my eyes were feeling a bit better and they feel even better now. By better I mean that I can tolerate a dry and bright room which I could not do 10 days ago.
My fatigue is also gone. I've been a bit tired from the additional exercise but the eye fatigue is almost non-existant. Last night I only got about 5 hrs sleep (the new sleep plan is a work in progress =D) usually this would completely wipe my eyes out the next day but as I'm typing this my eyes feel pretty good (minor irritation and dryness but ignorable).
Hopefully this isn't some kind of short-term "false" recovery but I think I have probably improved because:
- A lot of dry eye problems may be linked to inflammation
- Inflammation can be caused by a lot of different things which might mean (and I haven't found anything to back this up but I don't see why this might not be the case) there might be multiple things that I am doing that were exacerbating my eyes. Also, some medications may not cover the all the sources of inflammation or be adequate to compensate for the magnitude of the inflammation.
E.g. fish oil (obviously not a medication but a good example) can have a positive effect on your eyes but probably won't do anything if a) your omega 6 and 3 ratio isn't between the 2.3:1 - 1:1 range, or b) you have a high level of combined Omega 6 and 3.
So a lot of the things I am doing now are anti-inflammatory:
- Prednisone is an anti-inflammatory and Flaxonase is essentially a topical anti-inflammatory.
- My new diet is anti-inflammatory and is also a food exclusion diet in case I am getting inflammation from food intolerances.
- And finally, better exercise and sleep are also anti-inflammatory.
- I should also note that I am still doing a morning and evening eye care routine (sterilid in the shower in the morning, 5 minute warm compress, massage, eyelid clean with cotton buds in the evening, eye drops in, and flaxonase to finish if it is the morning)
Things I used to do that probably made it worse:
- Late nights
- No exercise due to studying all the time and a pretty significant back injury
- Eating crappy food (whole packs of chocolates in a sitting) and hardly drinking any water
- Stressful lifestyle. I still have this but I have made some changes to make life easier on me.
Reading this I'm actually surprised I didn't get super fat!
So hopefully hopefully hopefully (touch wood) my dry eye is an inflammation problem which will be reduced by this new regime. Also, hopefully I won't need mositure chamber glasses but having said that I'm still interested in getting some, but that will be another post. I'll post again in the future to update this as to my relapse/recovery and if further recovery, which of the things I am doing is having the positive effect.
Cheers,
Mike
My name is Mike and I've been reading the dryeyezone forums for a couple of years now and wanted to start posting to see if I could get some advice on where to get fitted moisture chamber glasses in Australia. Ironically, after having dry eyes for about 6 years they improved dramatically in the last week since registering, so this doubles as an introduction and success story.
So a bit about me, I'm in my late 20s and studying. I started to get dry eyes in my early 20s. It started out as mild and got progressively worse. Three years ago it got to the point where it started to impact on my ability to work on computers when the environment was warm-hot, dry or bright. Over the last few months it got to the point where I thought I might have to drop out of my degree.
The main symptoms I have had are:
- Constantly dry and painful eyes (unless in a cool, dark and humid environment)
- Very tired eyes (not affected by environment)
- Very limited tear production and very fast tear breakdown/evaporation
- possibly contributing: rosacea of the nose and face (so ocular rosacea is a strong possibility)
Treatment approach:
- Over the space of a couple of years (about 3 years ago) I went 3-4 GPs who all recommended either hayfever medication or eye drops which did nothing.
- Two years ago I moved for study and had better access to eye specialists. The first I saw told me that I had "Dry Eye Syndrome", told me to use eyedrops more regularly and put me on Doxycycline with very minimal effect. (I was very unimpressed with this guy but I still saw him about 3 times).
- The second Opthamologist I saw diagnosed me with Ocular Rosacea, kept me going on the Doxy, recommended an eye care plan (sterilid wash, warm compresses, massage, eye drops etc), and recommended I try fish oil supplements. After a few months this approach had not achieved any results and while I thought this guy was quite good I had a 3rd Opthamologist recommended to me which I thought I would try.
- Side note: inbetween Opth No.2 and Opth No.3 I saw a GP who recommended I try Akamin, another type of monocycline.
- Opthamologist number three diagnosed me as having "MILD Blepharitis", gave me a slightly better eye care program and sent me on my way. Also a very unimpressive doctor (he read the letter he was sending back to my GP aloud as he typed it and half of the information was incorrect (why I was on Akamin, my past history of treatment, current treatment etc) it was pretty shocking).
- In the last 6 months or so I found a great GP. Very proactive and willing to put in some extra effort. On his advice I cut the monocyclines and tried a couple of other medications. These didn't work out and he referred me to an allergist. The allergist didn't find anything so, about 10 days ago, he started me on prednisone which I quickly started to taper off and replace with Flixonase. He also screened for auto-immune diseases, including Sjrogens (seriously, how do three opthamologists not do this), which all came back negative.
I should say that at this point (about 10 days ago) I was getting very stressed about my health. My eyes were still getting worse and I was seriously thinking about dropping out of my degree. I was having really severe eye pain and my capacity to do work was really reduced. So I tried looking for some moisture chamber glasses (I found wearing sunglasses inside helpful so I thought that some moisture chamber sunglasses could be helpful) but I couldn't find any that fit!
The other thing I thought I would try was to fix my sleep, exercise, and diet.
I started this last Saturday, by Tuesday SUCCESS! my eyes were feeling a bit better and they feel even better now. By better I mean that I can tolerate a dry and bright room which I could not do 10 days ago.
My fatigue is also gone. I've been a bit tired from the additional exercise but the eye fatigue is almost non-existant. Last night I only got about 5 hrs sleep (the new sleep plan is a work in progress =D) usually this would completely wipe my eyes out the next day but as I'm typing this my eyes feel pretty good (minor irritation and dryness but ignorable).
Hopefully this isn't some kind of short-term "false" recovery but I think I have probably improved because:
- A lot of dry eye problems may be linked to inflammation
- Inflammation can be caused by a lot of different things which might mean (and I haven't found anything to back this up but I don't see why this might not be the case) there might be multiple things that I am doing that were exacerbating my eyes. Also, some medications may not cover the all the sources of inflammation or be adequate to compensate for the magnitude of the inflammation.
E.g. fish oil (obviously not a medication but a good example) can have a positive effect on your eyes but probably won't do anything if a) your omega 6 and 3 ratio isn't between the 2.3:1 - 1:1 range, or b) you have a high level of combined Omega 6 and 3.
So a lot of the things I am doing now are anti-inflammatory:
- Prednisone is an anti-inflammatory and Flaxonase is essentially a topical anti-inflammatory.
- My new diet is anti-inflammatory and is also a food exclusion diet in case I am getting inflammation from food intolerances.
- And finally, better exercise and sleep are also anti-inflammatory.
- I should also note that I am still doing a morning and evening eye care routine (sterilid in the shower in the morning, 5 minute warm compress, massage, eyelid clean with cotton buds in the evening, eye drops in, and flaxonase to finish if it is the morning)
Things I used to do that probably made it worse:
- Late nights
- No exercise due to studying all the time and a pretty significant back injury
- Eating crappy food (whole packs of chocolates in a sitting) and hardly drinking any water
- Stressful lifestyle. I still have this but I have made some changes to make life easier on me.
Reading this I'm actually surprised I didn't get super fat!
So hopefully hopefully hopefully (touch wood) my dry eye is an inflammation problem which will be reduced by this new regime. Also, hopefully I won't need mositure chamber glasses but having said that I'm still interested in getting some, but that will be another post. I'll post again in the future to update this as to my relapse/recovery and if further recovery, which of the things I am doing is having the positive effect.
Cheers,
Mike
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