Corneal Abrasions
What is a corneal abrasion?
A corneal abrasion is a scratch on the surface of the cornea. The cornea is the clear outer layer on the front of the eye. Corneal abrasions can be very painful.
How does it occur?
Corneal abrasions can be caused by:
A sports injury: This can happen in sports such as basketball or football when a player gets poked in the eye, or in tennis or racquetball when a player gets hit in the eye with the ball.
Something gets in your eye: Splinters or tiny pieces of dirt may come out in your tears, or your healthcare provider may need to remove it.
Something scratches your eye: You may scratch your eye with something such as a fingernail, branch, piece of paper, or comb.
Problems with contact lenses: Gas permeable contacts may become chipped or cracked and scratch your eye. Wearing contact lenses too long or sleeping in them can also cause an abrasion.
What are the symptoms?
redness
tearing
feeling like you have something in your eye
pain
a scratchy feeling
painful sensitivity to light
blurry vision
How is it diagnosed?
Your healthcare provider will ask about your symptoms and ask if you know how your eye was scratched. (If you don't know, the cause may be a disease rather than something in your eye.) Using special eyedrops and a light that makes an abrasion easier to see, your provider will look at your eye. The drops contain a dye that will make your vision yellow for a few minutes.
How is it treated?
If something is still in your eye, your healthcare provider will flush it out with water or remove it with a swab or needle (after numbing your eye with a drop of anesthetic).
Your healthcare provider may:
Give you antibiotic drops or ointment to use for several days.
Recommend frequent use of a lubricating eye drop.
Recommend you avoid wearing contacts until the abrasion has healed.
Give you another medicine that dilates your eyes and helps relieve pain and sensitivity to light.
Tape an eye patch over your eye to keep the eyelid closed. This helps to relieve pain.
Want to see you often until your eye is healed.
How long will the effects last?
Most corneal abrasions heal in a day or two. Larger abrasions will take longer. If your symptoms last longer than that, see your healthcare provider again because you may have a more serious problem.
Once the cornea has healed, you can usually resume your normal activities right away. If you wear contact lenses, your health care provider may ask you to wait one week after your cornea has healed before you wear your contact lenses again.
How can I help prevent a corneal abrasion?
Always wear goggles, safety glasses, or eye shields at work or when playing sports where your eyes could be injured.
Follow your eye care provider's instructions for wearing and caring for contact lenses. Do not wear them longer than recommended and DO NOT slep in them.
Developed by RelayHealth.
Published by RelayHealth.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to change as new health information becomes available. The information is intended to inform and educate and is not a replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or treatment by a healthcare professional.
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