The sand got into my eyes, it hurt so much that it was useless to rub it with my hands

Updated on healthy 2024-08-12
12 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-16

    The best way is to gently close your eyes, then lower your head, gently lift the upper eyelid outward with your index finger and thumb, (you can feel the separation of the eyelid from the eyeball), and then shake it a few times, and the sand that has just entered the eye will automatically fall out. If the sand doesn't come out, gently close your eyes, look down, shed some tears, and it will also be washed out. If you blink if you don't shed tears, the tears will be secreted, and the sand will be washed to the corner of the eye, and then, with a clean handkerchief, you can also close the eyes, pull the eyelids with your hands, and gently vibrate up and down to make the sand smoothly washed out by the tears.

    If this does not solve the problem, ask someone else to open the eyelids, find the sand, gently rub it out with a cotton swab, or slowly rinse it off with light salted cold boiled water. If it has been glued to the cornea, you have to go to the hospital and ask the doctor to find a way

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-15

    Do not rub your hands when you go, because there may be bacteria on your hands, clean your hands first and then put your hands on your eyes, know that your eyes are watery, and then wash them with water.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-14

    Guess it's trachoma.

    Please pay attention to eye hygiene.

    Don't rub your eyes with your dirty hands.

    In case the condition is exacerbated.

    Go to a major hospital for a check-up.

    In order to achieve the right medicine.

    Note: Aeolian trachoma is the third most common blindness in the world**.

    The watchtower owner attaches great importance to it.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    Step 1: Pinch the eyelids (the upper eyelid feels like the upper eyelid is pinched, and the lower eyelid is vice versa) and repeat forward several times, remembering that the eyelid must be separated from the eyeball.

    Step 2: After releasing the eyelids, blink them quickly a few times. The discomfort will go away.

    Repeat the above maneuvers several times until the symptoms disappear.

    If the above methods do not work, seek medical attention as soon as possible at the nearest hospital.

    If you can't find a foreign body, but your eyes are still uncomfortable, it means that you have rubbed your eyes vigorously after your eyes have entered the sand, or have made your eyes partially congested, which is naturally uncomfortable.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Do not rub to avoid damage to the conjunctiva and cornea with a hard foreign body, and wash the eyes if possible: rinse the eyes with saline and a syringe with the needle removed. If you don't have saline around, you can turn your eyelids over, where there is a palpebral groove, which is the most common incaldation of foreign bodies into the eye, and then use a clean cotton swab to gently glue out the sand.

    Hope it works for you.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    You can go to the hospital and have a look, and if you take care of it yourself, you can rinse your eyes with eye drops.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    You wash it with clean water and then wash it with a towel.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    What to do if sand gets in your eyes.

    When sand enters the eyes, many people can't help but rub it hard, but it's not right to do so. This is because foreign objects that are floating on the surface of the eyeball may rub onto the cornea (the surface layer of the black eyeball), abrasion the cornea, or embedding it into the cornea, causing infection and even corneal ulcer perforation. There are several types of bacteria that cause corneal ulcers, with Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection being the most virulent.

    If you are unfortunately infected with this bacteria, once the corneal ulcer occurs, the onset is acute and the development is rapid, if not treated in time, corneal ulcer perforation and even blindness may occur in the short term.

    The correct treatment after the sand flies into the eye is.

    Close your eyes slightly, then slowly half-open them, and repeat these movements two or three times. In most cases, the sand is washed out as tears flow. If the sand is still in the eye, you should ask someone else or go to the hospital to check the location of the sand.

    If the sand is on the inner surface of the eyelids, or on the surface of the white eyeballs, ask someone to gently wipe it out with a disinfectant cotton swab or a clean handkerchief.

    Correct steps. 1. Do not rub your eyes after sand and dust enters your eyes, so as not to cause corneal damage.

    2. After the sand and dust enter the eyes, gently lift the upper eyelid up and pull it a few times, rinse with tears, rotate the eyeballs, and then make the patient open the eyes, which can often discharge the foreign body out of the eyes.

    3. After the sand and dust enter the eye, open the upper eyelid, when the eyelid is turned, make the patient look down, the first aid person pinches the upper eyelid with the thumb and index finger, pulls it forward slightly, gently presses the thumb with the index finger and turns it up, finds the foreign body with tweezers or wet cotton swabs, and takes out the foreign body with wet handkerchiefs. It is forbidden to wipe the eyeballs with a dry cloth to prevent damage to the cornea. Sometimes it is necessary to use the light of a flashlight or a lamp to detect a foreign object.

    4. After the sand and dust enter the eyes, take out the foreign body, rinse the eyes with boiled warm water or normal saline, and drop eye drops (ointment).

    5. After the sand and dust enter the eyes, the above links cannot hurt the cornea.

    6. If the sand and dust are serious after entering the eyes, the foreign body in the eye cannot be removed, and the hospital should be sent to the hospital immediately.

    It is important to note that although Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection is very virulent, it is very invasive, and it must pass through the broken epithelium, in order to invade the cornea. So after the sand flies into the eyes, do not rub the eyes to avoid damage to the intact corneal epithelium. This is key to preventing Pseudomonas aeruginosa corneal ulcers.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    People's first reaction is to rub it, and it will easily fall out. But it does hurt a lot.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    You can drop eye drops and the sand will wash out.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Buy an eye ointment and apply it to your eyes, maybe you can bring it out, but you can't go to the hospital.

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Cry, and if it doesn't work, go to the hospital.

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