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Excessive fatigue. That's how it will be when you get on fire.
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Maybe it's an infection in your hand.
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Hurry to the hospital to find an ophthalmologist, the eye is sick and can't be delayed. According to what you said, the eyes are red next to them, it may be inflammation, and the eyeballs hurt when you move, and they are white at first, and now they are getting redder, indicating that the situation is serious, and it may be caused by cross-infection.
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It's all tingling, go to the ophthalmology department to take a look, it may be conjunctivitis, trachoma, acute ones are easy to treat, and if they are chronic, they will often attack, which is too uncomfortable.
Trachoma is usually acute, and the patient has foreign body sensation, photophobia, lacrimation, and a lot of mucus or mucinous discharge.
In the early stage of the disease, the patient feels that the eyes are hot, burning, photophobia, and red, and the eyes feel painful, and the pain is unbearable like entering the sand, followed by the eyelids are red and swollen, the eyelids are many, afraid of light, and tears, and when they get up in the morning, the eyelids are often stuck by secretions, and it is not easy to open. Some patients have small bleeding spots or hemorrhagic spots on the conjunctiva, and the discharge is mucopurulent, sometimes forming a gray-white pseudomembrane on the surface of the palpebral conjunctiva, and there may be gray-white infiltration spots on the corneal edge, and severe cases may be accompanied by headache, fever, fatigue, preauricular lymphadenopathy and other systemic symptoms.
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The medical name is stye, and the common name is stealing the eye of the needle.
Clinical manifestations of a stye.
Eyelids**localized redness, swelling, heat and pain, adjacent bulbar conjunctival edema.
1 After 3 days, pus is formed, and yellow pus heads appear.
External styes occur at the base of the eyelashes, and the sebaceous glands are manifested on the ** surface; The internal stye occurs in the meibomian gland and presents with the pain resolves after the conjunctival surface ruptures and drains pus, and the redness and swelling resolve.
It is recommended to go to the hospital**:
1 General**: moist and hot compress, local physiotherapy.
2 Antibiotics**.
3 Surgery**: For pus point formation, incision and drainage of pus.
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It's inflamed, buy some eye drops at the pharmacy, and if it doesn't work, go to the hospital to see.
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Guidance: You have conjunctivitis. It is a common disease in ophthalmology.
Since most of the conjunctiva is in direct contact with the outside world. As a result, it is susceptible to infections in the surrounding environment. Most of them are viral, though.
Acute viral conjunctivitis. Cordisone eye drops and ribavirin eye drops may be used alternately to alleviate the condition. Bacterial conjunctivitis.
Antibiotic syrups and ointments are required. Apply such as chloramphenicol eye drops or erythromycin eye ointment. If severe, antibiotics are taken by mouth or by injection.
Such as amoxicillin, penicillin, etc. Good luck with you**.
Now Brother Sharp has returned to a normal life, and his relationship with his family is very harmonious, and I wish Brother Sharp to be happier and happier.
If you have restore software or a built-in restore, restoring the system is effective and hassle-free. >>>More
Hehe, it looks red, but in fact, Tutu's pupils are colorless, and what we see is the color of its blood. We Asian eyes are black because our pupils are black, so we can't see red. >>>More
Most rabbits have a body that contains something called pigment. A small number of rabbits do not have pigment in their bodies, their fur is white, and their eyes are colorless and transparent. Because there are many blood vessels in the eyeball, there is a constant flow of blood in the eyeball, which makes the eye appear red.
Once upon a time, there was a rabbit .........So that's it.