Top answers from doctors based on your search:
Can you put eye drops sublingual
A 41-year-old member asked:

Dr. Gregory Hines answered
24 years experience Family Medicine
Two ways: The first is to have the child hold/pull their lower lid down, and drop the drops onto the lower lid. At 3 years old, the child may or may not be abl ... Read More
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Dr. James Ferguson answered
46 years experience Pediatrics
Depends on kid: If they will hold still, put your thumb on the cheek below the eye and pull the skin down creating a shelf with the lower lid.Put the drops on the she ... Read More
90,000 U.S. doctors in 147 specialties are here to answer your questions or offer you advice, prescriptions, and more. Get help now:
A 47-year-old member asked:

Dr. Ari Weitzner answered
33 years experience Ophthalmology
Ok!: Most people have trouble like this. Try lying down and dropping the drops onto the corner of your eyelid with your eyes closed, then open them- the dr ... Read More
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Dr. Damien Luviano answered
18 years experience Ophthalmology
Normal: Your eye has built in reflexes to blink when something. Is coming at it. Try rolling your eyes to the back of your head, pulling the lower lid down, p ... Read More
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A 32-year-old member asked:

Dr. David Chandler answered
33 years experience Ophthalmology
Renu is safe: Renu is generally a safe contact lens rewetting solution. The multipurpose solution can also be used for lens disinfection and insertion. Only if you ... Read More
A 39-year-old member asked:

Dr. Daniel Goldberg answered
Specializes in Ophthalmology
Yes: The redness under these circumstances is part of the eye's normal response to any foreign body introduced. See above answer to question regarding bur ... Read More
A 32-year-old member asked:

Dr. Alan Jackson answered
30 years experience Addiction Medicine
Yes: Does your baby have an eye infection? If not then you do not need to use them. Gentimycin in the past has been used as the first line antibiotic drop ... Read More
A 32-year-old male asked:

Dr. Jovita Anyanwu answered
30 years experience Internal Medicine
Yes: But majority of it will run out. Follow your doctors instructions
A 31-year-old member asked:

Dr. Tim Conrad answered
34 years experience Ophthalmology
Yes: This is normal. Some drops burn more than others.
A 22-year-old female asked:

Dr. Matthew Goren answered
32 years experience Ophthalmology
Yes: It really doesn't matter where you put them, as long as they get in your eye. Most people find putting them in the conjunctival sac easier because yo ... Read More
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A 25-year-old male asked:

Dr. William Cappaert answered
59 years experience Ophthalmology
May be allergy: You likely have allergic conjunctvitis Edwin. Drying of the eyes or exposure to air polutants are also possiblities. Try Zaditor (ketotifen) or Optiva ... Read More
A 24-year-old female asked:

Dr. Clarene Cress answered
Specializes in Pediatrics
Swelling or edema: will cause the conjunctiva to look like jelly. Rinse your eye with room temperature artificial tears or tap water, and then apply a cold compress. S ... Read More
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