Select Page

Best Blepharitis Relief. The Complete Solution for Recurring Blepharitis 

TheraLife Eye All-in-One Starter Kit
  • Stuck in Vicious Cycle of  Dry Eyes, Blepharitis, MGD
  • Target All 3 with TheraLife Protocol
  • Powerful All -Natural Anti-inflammatories.
  • Relief From Inside Out- No More Drops
  • 100% Money Back Guaranteed

Testimonial

“I had dry eyes before Lasik surgery in 2007. After Lasik, I was diagnosed with chronic dry eyes and blepharitis. My eyes were red, dry and painful. I tried many eye drops including prescription drop, antibiotic drops with no results. I started TheraLife Eye and can feel the difference in 2-3 weeks. I still cannot believe I have such total relief. I am so grateful for TheraLife.”

-C.L, Ohio

*Results may vary

Call and talk to a doctor if TheraLife is right for you- 1-877-917-1989 US/Canada

Blepharitis Relief

The Complete Solution for Recurring Blepharitis

Treat Dry Eyes, Blepharitis and MGD For Complete Recovery

 

blepharitis-eye

Definition

Blepharitis is eyelid inflammation. Typically affects both eyes along the edges of eyelids, causing eyelid swell and swollen eyelids.

Types

There are two types: anterior and posterior blepharitis.

  • Anterior – blepharitis is inflammation mainly centered around the skin, eyelashes, and lash follicles. Anterior blepharitis has staphylococcal and seborrheic variants.
  • Posterior blepharitis causes blocked oil gland (MGD), which involves the meibomian gland orifices, meibomian glands, tarsal plate, and blepharo-conjunctival junction. For more discussion, see below.

Causes

  • Chronic dry eyes
  • Acne rosacea. Rosacea causes facial skin inflammation, including eyelids.
  • Allergies. Allergies to contact lens solution, eye drops, or eye makeup can spur irritation.
  • Scalp dandruff (Seborrheic dermatitis). …
  • Lice or mites in eyelashes (Demodex).
  • Poor eyelid hygiene – including wearing eye makeup
  • excessive oil produced by the glands in the eyelid
  • Bacterial infection (often staphylococcal)
  • Associated with certain skin conditions. See below

Traditional treatments

Your eye doctor will most likely prescribe artificial tears, antibiotics, warm compresses, and eyelid cleaning to treating blepharitis.

Eyelid cleansers

In the old days, cleaning eyelids with baby shampoo was recommended, which was not effective. Remember not to use baby shampoo to keep your eyelids clean.

Hypochlorous acid eyelid cleansers work the best to disrupt the bacterial biofilm layer to stop the re-infection process. After warm compresses with closed eyelids, gently rub the cleanser along the eyelid edges to loosen dirt. Do not wash off. It is a gentle and yet effective way to keep your eyelids clean.

Warm compresses

Warm compresses with consistent heat for more than 10 minutes work well to unclog the oil glands.

A warm washcloth does not provide the amount of heat necessary.

Eye makeup

Your eye doctor will advise you not to use eye makeup, especially mascara, to clean your eyelids.

Contact lenses

Do not wear contact lenses during treatment until you recover.

Artificial tears

Artificial tears are adequate for mild to moderate dry eye relief. In severe cases, artificial tears can become ineffective for severe dry eyes.

Why does blepharitis keep on recurring?

Blepharitis is often a chronic condition that’s difficult to treat. Because the root cause is chronic dry eyes – where constant inflammation creates a vicious cycle of blepharitis, dry eyes, and MGD.

The condition most typically has a chronic course with intermittent exacerbations and eruptions of symptomatic disease.

The traditional blepharitis treatment may not sufficiently address the inflammatory dry eyes to eradicate blepharitis, including prescription eye drops.

Eye drops treat dry eyes from the surface. There is a limit on its ability to address the root cause of chronic dry eyes- low cellular metabolism caused by inflammation.

How TheraLife can help

Theralife developed an oral formula targeted to reduce inflammation, increase cellular activities, and restore normal functions to tear production. Increase tear volume, restore health to meibomian oil glands, reduce red, swollen, itchy eyelids, and restore vision.

Learn how TheraLife capsules work. 

Learn more dry eye treatment

Blepharitis Symptoms

Symptoms of blepharitis typically present with eye irritation, itching, red eyelids, flaking of the lid

margins, or changes in the eyelashes.

People complain of eyelids stuck in the morning due to crusty sticky build-up. Warm water can get the eyelids to open.

Other common symptoms of blepharitis include:

  • Burning
  • Blurred vision
  • Misdirected eyelashes
  • Watering
  • Foreign body sensation
  • Crusting on eyelashes
  • Swollen Red eyelids
  • Red eyes
  • Photophobia – light sensitivity
  • Pain
  • Decreased vision
  • Visual fluctuations
  • Heat, cold, alcohol, and spicy-food intolerance

Associated skin conditions

Researches at the National Eye Institute found other skin diseases are prevalent in blepharitis.

Herpes skin disease can be associated with red and blister formation.

Seborrheic dermatitis has oily skin flaking from the scalp or brows.

Rosacea-Rosacea is associated with pimples, a red nose, spider veins of the cheeks and eyelid margins, erythema, and papules.

The skin condition can generate persistent inflammation to keep blepharitis and dry eyes in circles.

What do your eyes look like

Gross examination of the eyelids shows red and crusting of the eyelashes and lid margins.

Slit-lamp examination shows additional features:

  • Loss of lashes (madarosis),
  • Whitening of the lashes (poliosis),
  • Lid scarring and misdirection of lashes (trichiasis),
  • Crusting of the lashes and meibomian orifices,
  • Eyelid margin ulceration,
  • Plugging and “pouting” of the meibomian orifices,
  • Telangiectasias of the lid margin,
  • Lid irregularity (tylosis).
  • The conjunctiva usually shows papillary injection. Advanced cases reveal tarsal thickening,
  • Loss of normal tarsal vascular architecture,
  • Subconjunctival substantia propria fibrosis,
  • Conjunctival scarring
  • Tarsal distortion due to cicatricial contraction and subsequent entropion.
Cornea Damage- Causing Eye Pain
  • Epithelial erosions,
  • Marginal infiltrates,
  • Marginal ulcers,
  • Limbal inflammation and thickening (limbitis) of the cornea.
  • Peripheral corneal irregularities formation.

Corneal can progress to infection and even perforation. That is why your eyes hurt.

How bacterial infection damage eyelids

Blepharitis frequently involves bacterial colonization of the eyelids.

Seborrheic dermatitis and meibomian gland dysfunction have increased colonization of the lid margin. Which results in the direct microbial invasion of tissues, immune system-mediated damage, or damage caused by the production of bacterial toxins, waste products, and enzymes.

Prognosis

Overall, the prognosis for patients with blepharitis is good to excellent.

Blepharitis only causes significant morbidity in a tiny subset of patients.

For most, it remains more of an asymptomatic affliction than a genuine threat to their health and function.

Impact of chronic blepharitis on quality of life.

People with chronic blepharitis experience discomfort and misery that can significantly reduce their well-being and ability to carry out daily life and work activities.

Recognition of the off and on course of the disease, and the necessity of management through a prolonged program rather than an instant cure, help them successfully approach the condition.

Anterior blepharitis is associated with bacterial infections.

The anterior variant of blepharitis involves mainly the lashes and associated non-meibomian oil glands. Various formations of debris adhere to the lashes.

  • Crusting refers to flakes of material that adhere to the lashes and usually represent seborrheic disease. The epithelial material is crusting.
  • In staphylococcal diseases, a collarette is an irregular ringlike formation. Staphylococcal blepharitis has the appearance of collarettes on the lashes. A sleeve is a smooth tube of material that also surrounds the base of the lash as it intersects the lid. Sleeving is associated with infection by the eyelash parasite.
  • Ulcers at the base the lashes.-covered by a crust of fibrin, which is lifted as the lash shaft grows.
  • Seborrheic blepharitis also involves the anterior lid primarily. It is associated with greasy crusts of material adherent to the eyelash shaft.

Corneal disease is most familiar with the staphylococcal variant of anterior lid disease.

Posterior blepharitis associated with MGD

Posterior blepharitis is principally related to the glands in your eyelids. 

Alterations in secretory metabolism and function lead to disease. The oily debris becomes more waxlike and begins to block the gland orifices. The stagnant material becomes a growth medium for bacteria and can seep into the deeper eyelid tissue layers, causing inflammation.

The inflammation leads to gland plugging, hardening of the lipid secretory material, inflamed orifices, and the formation of chalazia.

Complications

Conjunctivitis

Chronic pink eyes are common. It can result in a complication of blepharitis and require additional treatment besides eyelid margin therapy.

Antibiotics

Antibiotic-corticosteroid solutions can significantly reduce inflammation and symptoms of

conjunctivitis. Corneal infiltrates are with antibiotic-corticosteroid drops.

Eye ulcers

Small marginal ulcers are treated empirically. Larger, paracentral, or atypical ulcers should be scraped, and specimens sent for diagnostic slides and culture and sensitivity testing.

Steroids

The use of steroids can lead to cataracts, glaucoma, and viral reactivations.

Eyelid Disorder

Recurrent bouts of inflammation and scarring from blepharitis can promote positional eyelid disease. Trichiasis and lid notching can result in keratitis and severe symptoms. These conditions often are very refractory to simple management steps.

Entropion or ectropion

Eyelids ingrown or outgrown can develop and complicate the clinical situation.

 

YouTube video
Talk to a Doctor about dry eye treatment with TheraLife

Sign up for the TheraLife Newsletter and get 9 Simple Tips for Dry Eye Relief!

First Name *

Email *

Use Your Flex or HSA

Other Blepharitis Remedies

Solution Logo
Eyelid Detergent Cleanser

Strips away your eyes natural lubricants making eyelids sore and dry. Also allows bacteria and mites to re-attach to eyelids after cleaning.

HypoChlor Cleanser

This natural cleanser contains hypochlorous acid: it disrupts the biofilm layer where bacteria and mites like to anchor, preventing re-attachment

  • Contains ingredients that your own body already produces
Steroid Eye Drops

Strips away your eyes natural lubricants making eyelids sore and dry. Also allows bacteria and mites to re-attach to eyelids after cleaning.

TheraLife Eye Capsules

Clinically-proven ingredients that restore your eyes natural tear secretion functions to stop the dry eye cycle. This is a better and healthier long-term solution to treating dry eyes, over time you should not have to use eye drops.

Read more about how TheraLife Eye works >>

Moisturizing Eye Drops

Frequent use makes eyes drier and drier because your eyes stop producing natural tears

Fish Oil

Has been known to fight inflammation and thicken tears

Hot Wash Cloth

Loses heat over time

Hot Compress

Stays warm for 20 minutes. You need this prolonged heat to unclog the meibomian glands, allow lubricants, thicken tears for long lasting relief.

 

Pin It on Pinterest