When the eyelid is lowered - and you do not blink

They say that there is no person whose eyes are exactly the same in size, this is really so. Look at your own picture or, better yet, on yourself in the mirror. You probably will see a slight asymmetry in the size of your eyes. This is the absolute norm. But there are circumstances in which one eyelid can not fully open (the medical name for this is ptosis ). Ptosis is sometimes found at birth (it can be strong enough and require a surgical correction), but usually happens later.

The lacrimal eyelid is most often observed with a trauma to the nerve that controls the muscles that lift the eyelid. There are several different muscles that move the eye: one turns it to the right, others - to the left, others lift it, etc. If one nerve or more is damaged, for example by a virus or with a mild stroke, the result is a paralysis of the corresponding eye muscles. If the nerve, raising and lowering the eyelid, is affected, this eye will remain closed. On the other hand, the nerve can not be damaged, but the muscles of the eyes themselves can be affected. A classic example of this is severe myasthenia gravis , a disease in which there is no substance necessary for muscle contraction after they have received a neural signal. This disease also affects other nerves, mainly the head, neck and chest. When Aristotle Onassis suffered from this disease, he was struck by both centuries, and he could not keep his eyelids raised, except with the help of adhesive tape. When injecting patients with myasthenia, the missing substance in the form of tablets, eyelids usually rise immediately.

One eyelid or both can close if they are injured , with swelling or if involved in an allergic reaction . They will also be lowered at trachoma , a bacterial infection that causes blindness.

So various disorders - neurological, infectious, allergic and muscular - all of them can make one or both centuries fall.

That's how you can identify with one open eye, why the other closed.

If one of your eyelids does not open as widely as the second, let someone look into the pupil of this eye. If it is smaller than the pupil of the other eye and the eyeball looks a little squeezed, and the skin is slightly drier than on the other side, you have Horner's syndrome - a condition caused by a tumor of the lungs or chest, enlarged lymph gland or excess rib (with which some people are born) Which squeeze the nerve that controls this side of your face.

If, in addition to the lowered eyelid, you have a double in the eyes and a sharp headache, this is probably the result of a migraine . Nevertheless, if the combination of a descending eyelid and headaches is combined, contact the doctor immediately, as the examination can detect an aneurysm or a tumor in the brain .

When the swollen eyelids are swollen around the eye and muscle pain, you may have worms that are in raw or poorly cooked pork meat ( trichinosis ). However, tumors in the eyeball itself can also cause such omission and swelling.

If the omission of the eyelid comes and goes, you or myasthenia gravis or migraine.

When the age is lowered, do not panic at once, because the reason may be completely innocent. And here is an example for you. The 65-year-old man noticed a very small omission of the right eyelid, and he went to the hospital for this. He was given a long list of tests that needed to be done to rule out the possibility of myasthenia gravis, brain tumor or lung cancer. After a series of expensive, long and frightening tests, the diagnosis was " weakness of the eye muscles ." This person just had weak eye muscles, without any nasty reason. As we age, the muscles in any place, from the finger on the leg to the eyes, weaken.

Symptom: lowered eyelid

What can it mean? What to do with him?
Normal individual variation. Nothing.
Nerve damage. Surgical correction.
Myasthenia gravis. Medications, removal of the thymus gland.
Allergic reaction. Antihistamines, steroids.
Horner's syndrome (pressure on the nerve by the gland, tumor or excess rib). Treatment of the underlying cause.
With headaches and double vision: migraine, an aneurysm or a tumor in the brain. Treatment depends on the cause.
With muscular pain and swelling around the eyes: trichinosis. Medicines.
Normal aging process. Treatment is not necessary.