Tears supply oxygen and nutrition to the
cornea and help provide a smooth eye surface. A
tearing eye may be a nuisance but usually is not a serious problem. Many people
produce extra tears on cold or windy days. This is normal.
Tears:
- Keep the eye moist all the time (baseline
tears).
- Wash out the eye when it gets irritated (reflex
tears).
- Are related to strong emotions (cry reflex tears).
Excessive tearing in one or both eyes includes tearing that
is:
- More than usual for you.
- More in one
eye than in the other.
- Like crying, but you have not been
crying.
Excessive tears may indicate a problem with eye irritation or
drainage of the tears. If irritation is causing the extra tears, the cause of
the irritation needs to be identified and treated. Drainage problems can be
caused by problems with the position of the lower eyelid or by a block in the
drainage (tear duct) system.
Allergies may cause the eyes to produce an excessive amount of
tears.
Some people with dry eye syndrome (keratoconjunctivitis
sicca) complain of tearing too much. Actually, the eye becomes irritated
because it does not make enough tears. This irritation causes more tears to be
produced.