Conjunctivitis Symptoms and Causes explained to identify redness, discharge, irritation, and common viral, bacterial, or allergic triggers

Discover how conjunctivitis treatments are used in clinical practice. Learn about managing symptoms, preventing spread, and the role of specialized care.

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Symptoms and Causes

What Are The Symptoms of Conjunctivitis?

Conjunctivitis, commonly known as pink eye, is one of the most recognizable eye conditions. Its hallmark symptom is redness in the white of the eye, but this color change is just the surface. Many patients describe a gritty, sandy feeling, irritation, and difficulty keeping the eyes open or focusing on daily tasks.

At LIV Hospital, we teach patients that while redness is the universal sign, the accompanying symptoms tell the full story. Is there pus? Is it itchy or painful? These details help distinguish between a highly contagious bacterial or viral infection and a simple allergic reaction. Early identification ensures proper treatment and helps prevent spreading the infection to family, friends, and colleagues, keeping everyone safe and comfortable.

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Common Warning Signs of Conjunctivitis

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While symptoms vary based on the root cause, most forms of conjunctivitis share a core set of indicators. Watch for these changes in one or both eyes:

  • Redness (Hyperemia): The blood vessels on the white surface of the eye swell and fill with blood, creating the classic pink appearance.
  • Gritty Sensation: A feeling that something foreign, like dust or sand, is stuck in the eye.
  • Discharge: Fluid coming from the eye. This can be watery, stringy, or thick like pus.
  • Crusting: Eyelids or lashes may be stuck together in the morning by dried discharge.
  • Tearing (Epiphora): Excessive production of tears as the eye tries to flush out the irritant.
  • Swollen Eyelids: The lids may look puffy or droopy due to inflammation.
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Warning Symptoms

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Simple conjunctivitis is annoying but rarely dangerous. However, a red eye can mask serious, vision-threatening conditions like glaucoma or corneal ulcers. You should seek immediate care if you experience:

  • Severe Eye Pain: Conjunctivitis irritates, not deep pain. Severe pain suggests deeper tissue involvement.
  • Light Sensitivity (Photophobia): If you cannot tolerate light, it may indicate iritis or a corneal abrasion.
  • Vision Loss: Sudden blurriness that does not clear with blinking is a medical emergency.
  • Fixed Pupil: If the pupil does not react to light, it could be acute glaucoma.
  • Trauma: If the redness follows a hit to the eye or a chemical splash.

Patient History And Environment

Your environment plays a large role in your eye health. During the evaluation, the clinician will ask about:

  • Recent exposure to someone else with a red eye.
  • Your contact lens wear habits and cleaning routine.
  • Changes in household products like soap or laundry detergent.
  • Exposure to chemicals, smoke, or dust.
  • Seasonal patterns of your symptoms.

These clues help the doctor determine if the cause is likely to be an infection or an external irritant.

Conjunctivitis

Risk Factors You Can Control

Your daily habits significantly influence your likelihood of contracting or worsening conjunctivitis. These are modifiable conjunctivitis risk factors.

  • Contact Lens Hygiene: Sleeping in contacts, using tap water to clean them, or wearing disposables for too long are massive risk factors. This can lead to Giant Papillary Conjunctivitis or severe infections.
  • Hand Hygiene: Touching your eyes with unwashed hands introduces bacteria and viruses.
  • Cosmetics: Sharing mascara or using old, expired makeup can harbor bacteria.
  • Allergen Exposure: For allergy sufferers, failing to shower before bed allows pollen to stay on the face and pillow, triggering night-time flare-ups.

Risk Factors You Cannot Control

Some factors are environmental or biological.

  • Age: School-aged children are at the highest risk for bacterial and viral conjunctivitis due to close contact in classrooms.
  • Upper Respiratory Infections: If you have a cold or flu, the virus can easily travel up the tear ducts to infect the eye.
  • Autoimmune Conditions: Diseases like Rheumatoid Arthritis can cause “Dry Eye,” which mimics the symptoms of conjunctivitis and makes the eye more prone to infection.

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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

What are the warning signs of conjunctivitis?

The primary warning signs are the whites of the eyes turning pink or red, accompanied by a gritty, burning sensation. You may also experience excessive tearing, swollen eyelids, and discharge that can be watery (viral) or thick and yellow (bacterial).

School-aged children are at the highest risk due to close contact with others and developing hygiene habits. Contact lens wearers are also a high-risk group, especially if they sleep in their lenses or do not clean them properly. People with seasonal allergies are prone to the non-infectious type.

The infection symptoms are the same, but the causes can differ. Women are more frequently diagnosed with allergic or irritant conjunctivitis related to cosmetics or skincare products. They are also more prone to Dry Eye Syndrome, which can mimic the gritty sensation of pink eye.

Poor hand hygiene is the number one risk factor; touching your eyes transfers germs instantly. Sharing personal items like towels, pillows, or makeup also significantly increases the risk. For contact lens users, extending the life of disposable lenses is a major cause of chronic inflammation.

Infectious conjunctivitis (viral/bacterial) is not hereditary; it is acquired from the environment. However, the tendency to develop allergic conjunctivitis is genetic. If your parents suffer from hay fever, eczema, or asthma (atopy), you are genetically predisposed to developing allergic eye issues.

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