Ophthalmologists Hamilton OH

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Ophthalmologists. You will find informative articles about Ophthalmologists, including "3 Steps to Treating a Stye". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Hamilton, OH that can help answer your questions about Ophthalmologists.

Daniel Curtis Love, MD
513-868-2181
1017 Main St
Hamilton, OH
Thomas Theodore Macejko, MD
513-858-6500
563 Wessel Dr
Fairfield, OH
George Kranias, MD
513-381-1900
12124 Sheraton Ln
Cincinnati, OH
David Roscoe Adam, MD
513-523-2125
12124 Sheraton Ln
Cincinnati, OH
Ann G Neff, MD
305-326-6000
West Chester, OH
Richard Ramsay Roebuck, MD
513-844-2200
213 Dayton St
Hamilton, OH
Carol Louise Anderson, MD
513-896-1578
5161 Pleasant Ave
Fairfield, OH
Kenneth Melvin Buerk, MD
Oxford, OH
Kelly Patrick O'Neill, MD
513-868-7606
7593 Tylers Place Blvd Ste 107
West Chester, OH
Munawar Ahmad, MD
513-777-7097
6964 Tylersville Rd
West Chester, OH
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3 Steps to Treating a Stye

If your eyelid is painful, red or swollen, you might have an eye stye.  They're common, annoying, and not pretty but they're also not difficult to treat and usually aren't dangerous.  In fact, most styes can be treated at home and don't require medical attention. Here, three steps for treating a stye.

Step one: Diagnosis-Is it a stye or is it pinkeye (conjunctivitis)? 

If your eyeball and the pink area inside your lower eyelid is itchy, pink, irritated, crusty or oozing, you might have pinkeye.  That's a viral or bacterial infection of the conjunctiva-the skin layer that covers the inside of your eyelid and outside of your eyeball.  Most pinkeye infections are viral (sort of like a cold in your eye) and will go away on their own. Some, though, are caused by highly infectious bacteria and require treatment with antibiotic drops or ointment. If you believe you may have pinkeye, make an appointment with your doctor.

An eye stye affects just the eyelid, generally around the eyelashes. Styes are caused by a plugged oil gland near the eyelash that gets infected. It's similar to a pimple and often creates a swollen, painful bump. Styes usually develop over a few days and may drain and heal on their own. If the oil gland is completely blocked, however, a stye can become a chalazion large enough to affect vision. Chalazions usually heal on their own but if they get too big or painful, see your doctor. Normal eye styes, however, can be treated at home...

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