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Did you know dry eyes cause watery eyes? You may think my eyes are producing tears; how can my eyes be dry? Confused? Read on.

Why dry eyes cause watery eyes?

Dry eyes left untreated result in a lot of irritation which causes the body to produce reflex tears. Unfortunately, you have no control over reflux tears. As a result, eyes become more irritated, red, and painful.

Dry, irritated eyes get worse over time. That burning, gritty feeling that is a typical sign of dry eyes can cause pain, redness, and discomfort. Dry eye syndrome usually affects both eyes. Eye drops do not work in watery eyes.

TheraLife Eye has an oral watery eyes treatment that allows you to treat yourself at home. TheraLife goes right to the root causes of watery dry eyes with an entire line of natural products.

To learn more, click here.

What are dry eyes?

A dry eye is a condition in which a person doesn’t have enough quality balanced tears to lubricate the eye. Tears are vital for maintaining the health of the eye’s front surface and providing clear vision. Dry eyes can occur when tear production and drainage are not in balance.

How do eyes drain excess tears?

Dry eye is a common and often chronic problem, particularly in seniors.

With each blink of the eyelids, tears spread across the front surface of the eye, known as the cornea.

Tears provide lubrication, reduce the risk of eye infection, wash away foreign materials in the eye and keep the surface of the eyes smooth and clear.

Excess tears in the eyes flow into small drainage ducts in the inner corners of the eyelids called the tear duct, which drains into the back of the nose.

That is why your eye doctor suggests opening up your tear duct surgically when you have watery dry eyes. Sometimes, opening up the tear duct is not enough.

Watery dry eyes causes

People with dry eyes either do not produce enough tears, or their tears are of poor quality: The reasons are:

  • Not enough tears. Several glands in and around the eyelids produce tears. Tear production tends to decrease with age, various medical conditions, or a side effect of certain medications.Environmental conditions, such as wind and dry climates, can also decrease tear volume due to increased tear evaporation. When the usual amount of tear production decreases or tears evaporate too quickly from the eyes, dry eye symptoms can develop.
  • Poor quality of tears. There are three layers in tears: oil, water, and mucus.
    Each component must be in balance to protect and nourishes the front surface of the eye. A smooth oil layer helps prevent evaporation of the water layer.In contrast, the mucin layer spreads the tears evenly over the surface of the eye. If the tears evaporate too quickly or do not spread evenly over the cornea due to deficiencies with any of the three tear layers, dry eye symptoms can develop. Thus it is called Evaporative Dry Eyes.

Watery dry eyes risk factors.

Dry eyes can develop for many reasons, including:

  • Age. Dry eyes are a part of the natural aging process. The majority of people over age 65 experience some symptoms of dry eyes.
  • Gender. Women tend to have more dry eyes due to hormonal changes caused by pregnancy, the use of oral contraceptives, and menopause.
  • Medications. Certain medicines reduce tear production, including antihistamines, decongestants, blood pressure medications, and antidepressants.
  • Medical conditions- Autoimmune Diseases – People with Sjogren’s Syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, and thyroid problems are more likely to have dry eye symptoms.
    The autoimmune disease also has inflammation of the eyelids (blepharitis), inflammation of the surfaces of the eye, or the inward or outward turning of eyelashes.
  • Environmental conditions. Smoke, wind, and dry climates can increase tear evaporation resulting in dry eye symptoms: failure to blink regularly and everyday computer user issues contributing to dry eyes.
  • Contact Lenses and LASIK – Long-term use of contact lenses can be a factor in developing dry eyes. Refractive eye surgeries, such as LASIK, can decrease tear production and contribute to dry eyes.

Other Causes of Watery Eyes

Those who suffer from excessive watering of the eyes may suffer from dry eye syndrome. Excessive tear production can also be the result of many different conditions, such as:

  • Allergic Conjunctivitis – An inflammation of the eye caused by an allergic reaction to irritants such as pollen that cause the eyes to become red, itchy, and watery.
  • Conjunctivitis – Also known as “pink eye,” this highly contagious infection causes the blood vessels in the eye to become inflamed.
  • Common Cold – A virus usually entails sneezing, runny nose, and headache; the eyes are often watery.
  • Scleritis – A disorder of the eye where the sclera becomes intensely red and inflamed, caused by the body’s immune system attacking the body.
  • External Eyelid Stye – Seen as an inflamed area or bump on the eyelid, this condition results in red, painful pimple-like lumps near the edge of the eyelid.
  • Allergic Rhinitis – Also known as hay fever, the body reacts to specific allergens with sneezing and watery, itchy eyes.
  • Chalazion – When one of the oil glands of the upper eyelid becomes blocked and irritated, the eyes will respond with excessive watering.
  • Blepharitis – If the eyelash follicles become inflamed, the eyes may water to clear out the pollutants from the area.

All of these conditions can lead to dry eye syndrome.

Dry Eye Syndrome and Watery Eyes  

Essential for proper lubrication of the eyes, tears wash the eyes every time you blink. When irritants or other conditions cause the glands in the eye to produce fewer tears, they result in inflammation. Prolonged dry eyes not being treated lead to crying tears (reflex tears).

The brain controls the reflex tears. The crying tears are of poor quality, evaporates too quickly, and wash away the vital oils and mucous that protect the eyes.

Crying tears lead to dry, irritated eyes that create the vicious cycle of more tear production. More eye drops make the eyes drier and drier over time.

If the ducts that drain tears away become blocked, a condition known as lacrimal stenosis may be present. As a result, the watery eyes overflow onto the face. This duct may become blocked after nose surgery or trauma.

Older adults who have drooping eyelids due to aging may also develop dry eye syndrome and excessive watering eyes. Ectropion is the condition that is a result of this sagging. Eyes may become dry, sore, red, or burning as a result.

Symptoms of Watery Eyes

Other than the apparent excess tear production, if the eyes are dry and uncomfortable, dry eye syndrome may be to blame. Raw, irritated eyes that produce excess tears can lead to an overproduction of tears.

The excess tears wash away the vital oils needed to protect the eyes from airborne irritants. In addition, itchy and swollen eyes have an excess amount of tear production caused by allergies. They can also lead to dry eye syndrome.

Watery Eyes Treatment

TheraLife Eye has a natural solution for those who have chronic dry eyes. TheraLife can now treat and relieve eyes from burning, painful, dry, watery, and itchy eyes without the use of eye drops.

TheraLife Eye is clinically proven to alleviate the symptoms associated with chronic dry eyes and stop tear overproduction. The benefits of TheraLife Eye include:

  • Four out of five people benefit from TheraLife Eye
  • Reduction of irritation and inflammation of the tear glands, eye surface, and eyelids
  • Restores the body’s own natural ability to produce balanced tears
  • Restore and revitalize normal tear secretion function.
  • Works better than fish oil or flaxseed oil alone
  • No need for messy eye drops
  • 90-day money-back guarantee

Suppose you suffer from watery dry eyes. TheraLife Dry Eye Starter Kit is the best solution for the treatment of watery eyes.

It contains TheraLife Eye capsules, cleansers, compresses, and fish oil capsules. Finding a complete solution that allows your body to produce tears naturally is now available.

Call and talk to a doctor toll-free 1-877-917-1989 US/Canada.

References

  1. Perry HD, Donnenfeld ED. Dry eye diagnosis and management in 2004. Curr Opin Ophthalmol 2004;15:299-304.
  2. Schein OD, Munoz B, Tielsch JM, Bandeen-Roche K, West S. Prevalence of dry eye among the elderly. Am J Ophthalmol 1997;124:723-8.
  3. Schaumberg DA, Sullivan DA, Buring JE, Dana MR. Prevalence of dry eye syndrome among US women. Am J Ophthalmol 2003;136:318-326.
  4. Lin PY, Tsai SY, Cheng CY, Liu JH, Chou P, Hsu WM. Prevalence of dry eye among an elderly Chinese population in Taiwan: The Shihpai Eye Study. Ophthalmology 2003;110:1096-101.
  5. Brewitt H, Sistani F. Dry eye disease: The scale of the problem. Surv Ophthalmol 2001;45:S199-S202.

6. Lemp MA. Epidemiology and classification of dry eye. Adv Exp Med Biol 1998;438:791-803.

  1. Ashley Behrens, M.D. et al. Dysfunctional Tear Syndrome: A Delphi Approach to Treatment Recommendations, September 2006 Cornea. Publication pending.
  2. Blepharoplasty: What to know about eyelid surgery
  3. What you can do to treat dry eyes

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