Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Why Do Dry Eye Cases Peak In April?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 24 Apr, 2015 10:54 AM
    Dry eye -- the culprit behind red, watery, gritty-feeling eyes -- strikes most often in spring due to a surge in airborne allergens, a study says.
     
    Dry eye cases reach a yearly peak in April, the study pointed out.
     
    "For the first time, we have found what appears to be a connection between spring allergens like pollen and dry eye, but also saw that cases rose in winter," said lead researcher Anat Galor, associate professor of clinical ophthalmology at the Bascom Palmer Eye Institute at the University of Miami.
     
    Dry eye can significantly impact a person's quality of life by inducing burning, irritation and blurred vision.
     
    The latest discovery that allergies and dry eye conditions are linked suggests dry eye sufferers may benefit from allergy prevention in addition to dry eye treatments like artificial tears.
     
    For instance, wearing goggles outside for yard work and using air filters indoors may stave off springtime dry eye, the researchers said.
     
    The researchers discovered the correlation between allergies and dry eye by reviewing 3.4 million visits to eye clinics nationwide over a five-year period between 2006 and 2011.
     
    During that time, doctors diagnosed nearly 607,000 patients with dry eye. Researchers also charted the monthly prevalence of dry eye compared to an allergy index over time and found seasonal correlations,
     
    A seasonal spike occurred each spring, when 18.5 percent of patients were diagnosed with dry eye. Another spike came in winter. Prevalence of dry eye was lowest in summer at 15.3 percent.
     
    April had the highest monthly prevalence of dry eye cases: 20.9 percent of patients seen were diagnosed with dry eye that month.
     
    The research team hypothesises that the winter rise in cases of dry eye may be due to low indoor humidity caused by people using heaters indoors without a humidifier to offset the dryness.
     
    The study was published online in the journal Ophthalmology.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    A tool to track origin of blood cells, cancers

    A tool to track origin of blood cells, cancers
    In a bid to track the origin of diseases such as cancer, researchers have developed a system that generates a unique barcode in the DNA...

    A tool to track origin of blood cells, cancers

    New drug may cure diabetes at source

    New drug may cure diabetes at source
    A modified form of the drug niclosamide - now used to eliminate intestinal parasites - may hold the key to battling Type 2 diabetes at its source, says a study...

    New drug may cure diabetes at source

    Alcohol increases risk of HPV infection in men

    Alcohol increases risk of HPV infection in men
    Men, who consumed on an average over 9.9 grams of alcohol per day, had a significantly higher risk of HPV infection, the findings showed....

    Alcohol increases risk of HPV infection in men

    Mother's viral infection may trigger diabetes in kids

    Mother's viral infection may trigger diabetes in kids
    The exact cause of juvenile diabetes had eluded scientists for long and researchers have now found that a mother's exposure to viruses...

    Mother's viral infection may trigger diabetes in kids

    Family meals protect kids from obesity

    Family meals protect kids from obesity
    Even having as few as one or two family meals a week during adolescence may protect your kids from being obese when they turn into adults, says a study....

    Family meals protect kids from obesity

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk
    Independent of other known risk factors, measuring the sense of family or peer invalidation - or lack of acceptance - that teenagers harbour can...

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk