BODY SIGNAL ALERT EYE PAIN WITH REDNESS: DESCRIPTION AND POSSIBLE MEDICAL PROBLEMS
When you feel a pain in one or both eyes, it is usually one of several symptoms that accompany other eye problems. However, when it appears by itself and is accompanied by redness, it is usually due to an inflammation of one of the parts that make up the eyeball. Just as conjunctivitis, or pinkeye, is an inflammation of the conjunctiva (the membrane that lines the insides of the eyelids and part of the eyeball), other parts of the eye can also become inflamed. These include the iris, which is the colored part of your eye, and the sclera, a transparent film that serves as the outermost layer of the eye.
The choroid is located in the back of the eye, between the retina and the sclera. The choroid is the layer of the eye that contains the many blood vessels that nourish the eye, and, like the other parts of the eye, the choroid can become inflamed.
Iritis, or inflammation of the iris, is sometimes known as uveitis since the iris is part of the uvea, a membrane that lies just underneatl the sclera. The retina at the back of the eye can also become irritated.
Some of these conditions—such as scleritis—are more likely t( appear in a person who has rheumatoid arthritis, while others may arise for no apparent reason. Because it will be difficult for you to detemint – the cause of the pain yourself and the only symptom you’ll have is gen eralized pain in your eye with perhaps some redness, it’s important that you see your doctor.
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