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Eye Pain

 

 

We have selected the following expert medical opinion based on its clarity, reliability and accuracy. Credit: Sourced from the MSD Manual, Consumer Version; authored by Dr Christopher J. Brady (see below). Please refer to your own medical practitioner for a final perspective, assessment or evaluation.

 

Overview

Eye pain may be severe and seem sharp, aching, or throbbing, or people may feel only mild irritation of the eye surface or the sensation of a foreign object in the eye (foreign body sensation). Many causes of eye pain also cause the eye to look red. Other symptoms may be present depending on the cause of eye pain. For example, people may have blurred vision, a bulging eye, or pain worsened by bright light.

The cornea (the clear layer in front of the iris and pupil) is highly sensitive to pain. Many disorders that affect the cornea also affect the anterior chamber (the fluid-filled space between the iris and the inner part of the cornea) and cause spasm of the muscle that controls the iris (the ciliary muscle). When such spasm is present, bright light causes muscle contraction and worsening pain.

 

Causes

Disorders that cause eye pain can be divided into disorders that affect primarily the cornea, disorders of other parts of the eye, and disorders of other areas of the body that cause pain to be felt in the eye.

Common causes

  • Corneal disorders are the most common causes of eye pain overall, particularly:
  • Corneal scratches (corneal abrasions)
  • Foreign objects
  • However, most corneal disorders can cause eye pain.
  • A feeling of scratchiness or a foreign body sensation may be caused by a disorder of the conjunctiva (the thin membrane that lines the eyelid and covers the front of the eye) or of the cornea.

 

Evaluation

Mild eye irritation or a foreign body sensation is common and not usually serious. However, true pain in the eye can be a sign of a severe, vision-threatening disorder. The following information can help people decide when to see a doctor and help them know what to expect during the evaluation.

Warning signs

In people with eye pain, certain symptoms and characteristics are cause for concern. They include:

  • Vomiting
  • Halos around lights
  • Fever, chills, fatigue, or muscle aches
  • Decreased sharpness of vision (visual acuity)
  • Bulging of an eye (proptosis)
  • Inability to move the eye in all directions (such as right, left, up, and down)

 

When to see a doctor

People who have severe pain, eye redness, or warning signs should see a doctor right away. People with mild pain and no eye redness or warning signs can wait a day or two to see if the discomfort goes away on its own.

What the doctor does

Doctors first ask questions about the person's symptoms and medical history. Doctors then do a physical examination. What they find during the history and physical examination often suggests a cause of the eye pain and the tests that may need to be done (see Table: Some Causes and Features of Eye Pain).

Doctors ask the person to describe the pain, including when it started, how severe it is, and whether it hurts to look in different directions or blink. They ask about whether the person has ever had eye pain and whether the person is sensitive to light, has blurred vision, or feels as if the eye contains a foreign object.

During the physical examination, doctors check for the presence of fever or a runny nose. They check the face for tenderness.

Most important is the eye examination, including the entire eye, eyelids, and the region around the eye. Doctors check:

  • Whether the eyes are red or swollen
  • How clearly a person can see using a standard eye chart (visual acuity)
  • Whether the person can see in each part of the field of vision (visual field testing)
  • How the pupils react to light
  • Whether shining a light into the unaffected eye causes pain in the affected eye when the affected eye is closed (called true photophobia)
  • If doctors suspect a foreign object but do not see one, they turn the eyelids inside out to search for hidden foreign objects.
  • Doctors usually do a slit-lamp examination. A slit lamp is an instrument that enables a doctor to examine the eye under high magnification. Doctors place a drop of fluorescein stain on the cornea to show scratches or certain kinds of infection, including ulcers. Doctors use tonometry to measure the pressure inside the eye (intraocular pressure). They use an ophthalmoscope (a light with magnifying lenses that shines into the back of the eye) to examine the lens, vitreous humour (the jellylike substance that fills the eyeball), retina (the light-sensing structure at the back of the eye), optic nerve, and the retinal veins and arteries.
  • Sometimes findings are helpful in making a diagnosis. Particular findings or combinations may point to particular disorders.
  • Findings may also help suggest or eliminate certain types of disorders.
  • Corneal disorders, among other disorders, tend to cause eye redness, tearing, and pain. If those symptoms are absent, a corneal disorder is very unlikely.
  • Pain on the surface of the eye, a foreign body sensation, and pain with blinking suggest a foreign object.
  • People who wear contact lenses may have a corneal scratch, a corneal ulcer, or contact lens keratitis.
  • When measuring eye pressure, doctors put a drop of anaesthetic into the eye. If pain then disappears, the cause of pain is probably a corneal disorder.
  • Deep, aching, throbbing pain often indicates a possibly serious disorder such as acute closed-angle glaucoma, anterior uveitis, scleritis, endophthalmitis, orbital cellulitis, or orbital pseudotumor. If, in addition, there is eyelid swelling, bulging of the eye, or inability to move the eye to look in all directions, the most likely disorders are orbital pseudotumor, orbital cellulitis, or possibly severe endophthalmitis.

 

Some Causes and Features of Eye Pain

Contact lens keratitis

  • Inflammation of the cornea—the clear layer in front of the iris and pupil—caused by wearing contact lenses for long periods of time
  • Usually affecting both eyes
  • Eye ache and a feeling of grittiness in the eye
  • Eye redness, tearing, and sensitivity to light
  • In people who wear contact lenses for long periods of time

 

Corneal scratch (abrasion) / A foreign object (body)

  • Symptoms that begin after an eye injury, which may not be noticed in infants and young children
  • Pain in the affected eye when blinking and a foreign body sensation
  • Eye redness, tearing, and usually sensitivity to light

 

Corneal ulcer

  • Often a greyish patch on the cornea that later becomes an open, painful sore
  • Eye ache and a foreign body sensation
  • Eye redness, tearing, and sensitivity to light
  • Sometimes in people who have had an eye injury or who have slept with their contact lenses in

 

Pink Eye (Epidemic keratoconjunctivitis)

  • Inflammation of the conjunctiva, the membrane that lines the eyelids and covers the front of the eye, and the cornea caused by an adenovirus
  • Usually in both eyes
  • Eye ache and a feeling of grittiness in the eye
  • Eye redness, tearing, and usually sensitivity to light
  • Often eyelid swelling and swollen, tender lymph nodes in front of the ears
  • Rarely temporary, severe blurring of vision

 

Herpes simplex keratitis (infection of the cornea caused by the herpes simplex virus)

  • Usually affecting only one eye
  • Early: Symptoms that begin after an episode of conjunctivitis
  • Blisters on the eyelid, sometimes with crusting
  • Late or recurring: Eye redness and watering, eye pain, impaired vision, and sensitivity to light

 

Shingles (Herpes zoster ophthalmicus)

  • Affects the face and eye, caused by the chicken pox (varicella-zoster) virus
  • Usually affecting only one eye
  • Early: A rash with blisters and/or crusts on one side of the face, around the eye, on the forehead, and sometimes on the tip of the nose
  • Late: Eye redness, tearing, usually sensitivity to light, and eyelid swelling

 

Arch eyes / Welder's (ultraviolet) keratitis

  • Inflammation of the cornea caused by exposure to excessive ultraviolet light
  • Usually affects both eyes
  • Symptoms that begin hours after exposure to excessive ultraviolet light (as is produced during arc welding, by a sunlamp, or by bright sun reflecting off snow, particularly at high altitudes)
  • Eye ache and a feeling of grittiness in the eye
  • Eye redness, tearing, and sensitivity to light

 

Glaucoma (closed-angle)

  • Severe eye ache and redness
  • Headache, nausea, vomiting, and pain with exposure to light
  • Disturbances in vision such as halos seen around lights and/or decreased vision

 

Anterior uveitis

  • Inflammation of the anterior chamber—the fluid-filled space between the iris and cornea
  • Eye ache and sensitivity to light
  • Eye redness (particularly around the cornea)
  • Blurring or loss of vision
  • Often in people who have an autoimmune disorder or who recently had an eye injury

 

Infection inside the eye (Endophthalmitis)

  • Affecting only one eye
  • Eye ache, intense eye redness, sensitivity to light, and severely decreased vision
  • Often in people who have had recent eye surgery or a serious eye injury

 

Inflammation of the optic nerve (Optic neuritis)

  • Usually mild pain that may worsen when eyes are moved
  • Partial or complete loss of vision
  • Eyelids and corneas that appear normal
  • May be related to multiple sclerosis

 

Infection of the eye socket (Orbital cellulitis)

  • Affecting only one eye
  • Bulging of the eye, eye redness, pain deep within the eye, and aches in and around the eye
  • Red and swollen eyelids
  • Inability to fully move the eye in all directions
  • Impaired vision or loss of vision
  • Fever
  • Sometimes preceded by symptoms of sinusitis (see below)

 

Scleritis (inflammation of the white of the eye called the sclera)

  • Very severe pain, often described as boring, and sensitivity to light
  • Watering of the eyes
  • Red or violet patches on the white of the eye
  • Often in people who have an autoimmune disorder

 

Cluster headaches: Headaches that:

  • Occur in clusters
  • Occur at the same time each day
  • Cause severe, piercing, knife-like pain, a runny nose, and watery eyes

 

Migraines: Headaches that:

  • May be preceded by temporary disturbances in sensation, balance, coordination, speech, or vision (such as seeing flashing lights or having blind spots), called the aura
  • Typically cause a pulsating or throbbing pain
  • Are accompanied by nausea, vomiting, and sensitivity to sounds, light, and odours

 

Sinusitis

  • Sometimes swelling around the eye but no other eye symptoms
  • A yellow or green thick nasal discharge (sometimes with bleeding), headache, or eye or facial pain that varies with head position
  • Fever, tenderness of the face, sometimes a productive cough during the night, and bad breath

 

Testing

The need for tests depends on what doctors find during the history and physical examination. Testing is usually not necessary. However, if doctors find increased intraocular pressure, they may refer the person to an ophthalmologist (a medical doctor who specializes in the evaluation and treatment—surgical and nonsurgical—of eye disorders) for gonioscopy. A gonioscope is a special lens that allows doctors to examine the drainage channels in the eye.

Bulging of the eye and inability of an eye to move in all directions without moving the head can indicate orbital cellulitis or orbital pseudotumor. Computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is then done to check for these disorders. CT may also be done if sinusitis is suspected but the diagnosis is not otherwise clear or if complications are suspected. MRI with a radiopaque dye may be done if optic neuritis is suspected.

Doctors send a sample of fluids from inside the eye (vitreous or aqueous humor) to the laboratory if endophthalmitis seems likely. They may send a sample from the cornea or a blister if herpes simplex keratitis or herpes zoster ophthalmicus seems likely, but the diagnosis is not certain. In the laboratory, technicians try to grow bacteria or viruses (culture) to confirm infections and determine the organism causing the infection.

 

Treatment

  • Treatment of the cause
  • Pain relievers, sometimes opioids
  • Sometimes eye drops to dilate the pupil

 

The best way to treat eye pain is to treat the cause of the pain. People may also need to take pain relievers (analgesics) until the pain stops. If an over-the-counter analgesic such as acetaminophen or a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug is ineffective, an opioid may be necessary. Sometimes people with pain caused by anterior uveitis or corneal disorders also need to use an eye drop that prevents ciliary muscle spasm by dilating the pupil and thus reduces eye pain with light exposure. For example, cyclopentolate may be used.

 

KEY POINTS

  • Usually doctors can determine the cause of eye pain during an examination.
  • People with severe pain, eye redness, or warning signs (vomiting, halos around lights, fever, decreased visual clarity, bulging eyes, and inability to move the eye in all directions) should see a doctor right away.



About the author

Dr Christopher J. Brady

MD

Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology, Wilmer Eye Institute, Retina Division, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine



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