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| What is a marginal ulcer? |
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| A marginal ulcer is a small ulcer on the front part of your eye, the cornea. The cornea is the clear 'window' of the eye'. An 'ulcer' is a shallow crater, a bit like a crater on the surface of the moon. A 'marginal ulcer' is a shallow ulcer on the surface of the cornea. |
The cornea a marginal ulcer: the eye is red just near the ulcer (the ulcer appears green when the doctor or nurse places a special fluorescent dye drop in your eye) Below, a side view |
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| The ulcer forms as part of your body's reaction to bacteria (germs). Some bacteria are trapped in the eyelids, and some are naturally present on the surface of everyone's eyes. The bacteria may invade the surface of the cornea, and your body's immune system reacts to the bacteria to make the ulcer. When the body 'overreacts' an ulcer forms. |
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At first your eye starts to feel a little sore, as though something may be in it, and a little bit achy. About 1-2 days later it may start to water and be painful and red. Bright lights become painful, and your eye may become sticky and difficult to open in the morning. |
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There are two parts to the treatment: |
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You are usually given steroid drops to put in your eye. These stop the eye's immune system overreacting and so allows the ulcer to heal. The steroid drops, such as Predsol or Predsol-N, generally have no side effects for the short time they are needed (1-3 weeks). The ulcer usually gets a little better in a day, and completely better in a week. Sometimes an antibiotic drop is needed such as the 'N' part of Predsol-N or chloramphenicol to stop a more serious infection of the cornea. |
| Doctors believe that the bacteria in the glands of the eyelids help to cause these ulcers. Some people develop marginal ulcers quite frequently, perhaps every few months. You may be able to stop more ulcers developing, or at least make them less frequent, by cleaning your eyelids regularly. The cleaning helps to reduce the number of bacteria in the glands of the lid. The advice below is modified from Birmingham & Midland Eye Centre advice sheet. You need
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| What to expect A typical attack will last a week without treatment, sometimes getting better without drops. With drops (Predsol N or equivalent) your eye will feel a lot better the next day, nearly recovered in 3-4 days, and nearly back to normal after a week. Occasionally you may notice recurrences even with these 'preventative' measures, but gradually the episodes become fewer with longer between. If there is no improvement in 2 days, you may have a different type of ulcer. You should certainly seek advice from an Ophthalmologist if your eye gets worse not better. |
| Leaflet download |
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| If you are a health professional and want to have a leafet to give to give to patients, instead of this web page, see 180k Adobe. Alternatively, this is a Microsoft Publisher document click here, and you are welcome to download it and print copies. You are welcome to make changes for your patients (you can edit the leaflet in Microsoft Publisher). You will need M Publisher 2000 to open and
print the document. M Publisher is bundled as part of Microsoft Office.
The only condition is that you let me know if there are any errors. |
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----------------------Eye pages website feedback -----this page edited June 2008---------------------- |