Foreign Body in Eye
A foreign body is something such as an eyelash, sawdust,
sand, or dirt can that gets into the eyes. The main symptom
is irritation or pain.
First Aid
- Glass fragments in eye
With your child bending forward, try to get flakes of
glass off the skin by blowing on the closed eyelids. A
few pieces may be removed by touching them with a piece
of Scotch tape. Pour water over the eyelids and face to
get off any remaining glass. Cover the eyes with a wet
washcloth and call your child's health care provider.
The eye should not be rubbed.
- Small particles in eye
If there are a lot of small particles in the eye (such as
dirt or sand), clean around the eye with a wet washcloth
first. Then have your child try to open and close the
eye repeatedly while submerging that side of the face in
a pan of water. If your child is too young to cooperate
with this, hold him face up under a gently running warm
water tap or pour warm water into the eye. The eyelids
must be held open during the irrigation.
- Particle in a corner of the eye
If the particle is in the corner of the eye, try to get
it out with the corner of a clean handkerchief or a
moistened cotton swab.
- Particle under the lower lid
If the particle is under the lower eyelid, pull the lower
lid out by depressing the cheek and touch the particle
with a moistened cotton swab. If that doesn't work, try
pouring water on the speck while holding the lid out.
- Particle under the upper lid
If the particle can't be seen, it's probably under the
upper lid (the most common hiding place). Try having
your child open and close the eye several times while his
face is submerged in a cake pan or pie pan of water. If
this fails, pull the upper lid out and draw it over the
lower lid. This will sometimes dislodge the particle.
Call Your Child's Health Care Provider Immediately If:
Written by B.D. Schmitt, M.D., author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2006 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.