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<<Has anyone found the tear duct plugs to be helpful?>>

Hi Kay,

Having Sjogrens, I have serious dry eye problems. My Opthamologist plugged

both my top and bottom ducts in each eye. He tried the temporary ones but

they fell out. So, he put permanent ones in (it hurts a LOT!!!) and I've

done a lot better, but still have problems. I had this done about 4 or 5

years ago. I would highly recommend this to anyone who has Dry Eye Syndrome

or Sjogrens.

Good luck!

Dawn in MI

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To Kay Braddock

I've dealt with severe dry eyes for almost 20 years. Eventually I was

diagnosed with secondary sjogren's. Dry eyes are not a minor problem. I

went through eleven opthamologists before I met my present opthalmologist

and corneal disease specialist that showed me how to cope much better than I

had been able to do. And recently we all received an e-mail from TyBJK21

which referred us to WWW.uveitis.org. This is the center which Dr.

runs( I believe he's head of Harvard Medical Ophamology Dept.), and

who is considered one of the best doctors in the country. He's famous.

Anyway, I even saw him back in 1987.

If you want, I'll be happy to tell you the ritual I go through each day at

least twice a day with hot compresses, massaging the lower eye lid glands,

and how I constantly use only preservative artificial tears and only

preservative free eye ointment at bedtime. This procedure was a Godsend to

me. It helps enormously to cope. If you want, I'll write to you as to how I

do everything to make my eyes tolerable and not drive me insane. These eye

problems are not to be wrote off as minor. They can almost break you down

mentally. So, if you or anyone else wants me to write, just write to me at

www..Brazil@....

Bill Brazil/Boston-NH area

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I have Sjogren's and have had a lot of problems with dry eye. About 8

or so years ago, I had a corneal erosion from dryness and after that I

had my tear ducts top and bottom cauterized (that /really /hurts and

left me with pretty impressive shiners :-) ). I go to a different

doctor now and when the bottom ones opened again he put plugs in which

have stayed. I have had a lot of success with the plugs/cauterization.

I also take Evosec for dryness of the mouth and esophagus that made it

hard to talk and swallow. It helped that but at the same time, my eyes

also were better. It isn't listed to use it that way but it worked for

me! Dry eyes aren't minor, even the relatively small erosion I had was

extremely painful. Bill, I'd love to know the routine you are using, it

sounds very helpful.

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just wondering exactly what these " plugs " are that people are having put into

their eyes. can someone explain please?

james

Meg Minnich <mjminn@...> wrote: I have

Sjogren's and have had a lot of problems with dry eye. About 8

or so years ago, I had a corneal erosion from dryness and after that I

had my tear ducts top and bottom cauterized (that /really /hurts and

left me with pretty impressive shiners :-) ). I go to a different

doctor now and when the bottom ones opened again he put plugs in

---------------------------------

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-

The plugs are teeny little plastic tear drop shape things (isn't that

technical?) that can be inserted into the tear duct to block it so that

the tears stay in your eye instead of running out. They are so small

that the doctor couldn't find it in the container and had to hunt for

about 5 minutes! It only takes a minute to put them in and doesn't hurt

at all. I think they are a great innovation!

Meg

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<< just wondering exactly what these " plugs " are that people are having put

into their eyes. can someone explain please???

Hi ,

If someone else has answered this, please forgive me as I have lost my

emails.

They are tiny " plugs " that the doc sticks into your tear ducts. There are

temporary ones (I had problems with them as they were always falling out, so

I got perm. ones) and permanent ones. They help your eyes to stay moist. To

me it seems by plugging them it'd have the opposite effect, but it doesn't!

I highly recommend having them if your Opthamologist suggests it!

Also, years ago I used Lacricerts in my eyes. They are small pieces of

" plastic " that looks like rice and you put them in your eyes in the morning.

They sort of 'melt' throughout the day and keep your eyes moist. If I

remember correctly, they were pretty expensive...I think for 60 of them it

cost around $50.00 and that was around 15 years ago. They worked great

except they made your eyes blurry at times.

Take care,

Dawn

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