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First Aid - Black Eye Treatment |
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Thursday, 07 February 2008 |
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Please call 911 immediately if you are having chest pain, difficulty breathing, severe bleeding, sudden weakness or numbness, or if you think you have a medical emergency. Black Eye Treatment Self-Care at Home Rest and ice applied early after the injury help to decrease swelling and pain. - Ice helps to decrease swelling by constricting blood vessels, by decreasing fluid accumulation, and by cooling and numbing the area.
- Apply ice for 20 minutes an hour every hour while awake, for the first 24 hours. Ice should not be applied directly to the injury.
- To avoid potential cold injury to the site, wrap the ice in a cloth or use a commercial ice pack. A bag of frozen vegetables wrapped in a cloth makes a good ice pack.
- Protect the area from further injury. Avoid athletic or other possibly injurious activities until the eye has healed.
- Do not put a steak or a piece of raw meat on a black eye. No scientific evidence supports this treatment. Putting potentially bacteria–laden meat on a mucous membrane or an open skin injury can be dangerous.
Medical Treatment For simple, uncomplicated black eyes, the treatment prescribed is similar to home treatment: ice, pain medications (avoid aspirin–unless prescribed by a doctor or cardiologist for a heart condition – because this may increase bleeding), rest, and protection of the injured area. For more complicated injuries, the patient may be referred to an appropriate specialist: - A neurosurgeon for injuries to the skull or the brain
- An ophthalmologist for injuries to the eye itself
- An otorhinolaryngologist [ear, nose, and throat (ENT)] for fractures to the face
- A plastic surgeon to repair serious cuts to the face
VitaDocs Medical Reference from eMedicineHealth
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