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Chapter List For:
The Doctors Book of Home Remedies:
  1. Introduction to Doctors Home Remedies
  2. Acne
  3. Allergies
  4. Angina
  5. Athritis
  6. Asthma
  7. Athletes Foot
  8. Backache
  9. Bad Breath
  10. Bed-Wetting
  11. Belching
  12. Bites
  13. Black Eye
  14. Bladder Infections
  15. Blisters
  16. Blood Pressure
  17. Body Odor
  18. Boils
  19. Breast Discomfort
  20. Breastfeeding
  21. Bronchitis
  22. Bruises
  23. Bruxism
  24. Burns
  25. Bursitis
  26. Canker Sores
  27. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
  28. Cellulite
  29. Chafing
  30. Chapped Hands
  31. Chapped Lips
  32. Cholesterol
  33. Colds
  34. Cold Sores
  35. Colic
  36. Conjunctivitis
  37. Constipation
  38. Corns and Calluses
  39. Cuts and Scrapes
  40. Dandruff
  41. Denture Troubles
  42. Depression
  43. Dermatitis and Eczema
  44. Diabetes
  45. Diaper Rash
  46. Diarrhea
  47. Diverticulosis
  48. Dry Hair
  49. Dry Skin and Winter Itch
  50. Earache
  51. Ear Infection
  52. Earwax
  53. Emphysema
  54. Endometriosis
  55. Eye Redness
  56. Eyestrain
  57. Fatigue
  58. Fever
  59. Fissures
  60. Flatulence
  61. Flu
  62. Food Poisoning
  63. Foot Aches
  64. Foot Odor
  65. Forgetfullness
  66. Frostbite
  67. Genital Herpes
  68. Gingivitis
  69. Gout
  70. Hangnails
  71. Hangover
  72. Headaches
  73. Heartburn
  74. Heat Exhaustion
  75. Hemorrhoids
  76. Hiccups
  77. Hives
  78. Hyperventilation
  79. Impotence
  80. Incontinence
  81. Infertility
  82. Ingrown Hair - 10 Ways to Get a Clean Shave
  83. Ingrown Nails
  84. Insomnia
  85. Intermittent Claudication
  86. Irritable Bowel Syndrome
  87. Jet Lag
  88. Kidney Stones
  89. Knee Pain
  90. Lactose Intolerance
  91. Laryngitis
  92. Menopause
  93. Menstrual Cramps
  94. Morning Sickness
  95. Motion Sickness
  96. Muscle Pain
  97. Nausea
  98. Neck Pain
  99. Night Blindness
  100. Nosebleed
  101. Oily Hair
  102. Oily Skin
  103. Osteoporosis
  104. Perfect Posture
  105. Pet Problems
  106. Phlebitis
  107. Phobias and Fears
  108. Poison Ivy and Oak
  109. Postnasal Drip
  110. Premenstrual Syndrome
  111. Psoriasis
  112. Raynauds Syndrome
  113. Restless Legs Syndrome
  114. Scarring
  115. Shingles
  116. Shinsplints
  117. Side Stitches
  118. Sinusitis
  119. Snoring
  120. Sore Throat
  121. Stained Teeth
  122. Stings
  123. Stress
  124. Sunburn
  125. Swimmers Ear
  126. Tachycardia
  127. Tartar and Plaque
  128. Teething
  129. Tendinitis
  130. Tmj
  131. Toothache
  132. Travelers Diarrhea
  133. Triglycerides
  134. Ulcer
  135. Varicose Veins
  136. Vomiting
  137. Warts
  138. Wrinkles
  139. Yeast Infections
From the Rodale book, The Doctors Book of Home Remedies:
Edit id 2830

Black Eye


Previous Chapter Bites
Next Chapter Sodium


Black Eye

5 Ways to Clear up the Bruise

You think your black eye bugs you now? It's a good thing you didn't get your shiner back in the early 1900s! "Years ago people used to put a leech on a black eye to suck out the blood," says Jack Jeffers, M.D., an ophthalmologist at Wills Eye Hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Leeches got squashed as the treatment of choice once people found livestock more to their liking. "Sirloin steak is what my father used," says Jimmy, a second-generation butcher at Richard and Vinnie's Quality Meats in Brooklyn, New York. "When I was a kid, I used to get a lot of black eyes, and my father, being a butcher, used to put steaks on them. And it worked!"

Doctors no longer use leeches for treatment (thank goodness!), and it is unnecessary to waste a good steak on your eye. The best—and most effective—ways to block a black eye are much simpler than that. Here's how.

Pack it in ice. Jimmy's dad had the right idea, but it was the coldness of the steak, not the meat itself, that did the trick. In fact, a vegetarian would have gotten the same results by using iceberg lettuce!

Cold works in two ways. It helps keep the swelling down and, by constricting the blood vessels, helps decrease the internal bleeding, which is what causes the black-and-blue color.

Dr. Jeffers recommends applying an ice pack for the first 24 to 48 hours. "If your eye is swollen shut, use it for 10 minutes every 2 hours the first day," he advises. To make an ice pack for the eye, put crushed ice in a plastic bag and tape it to the forehead. This will prevent putting pressure on the eye.

Try the Tyson treatment. Champion boxer Mike Tyson has dished out lots of black eyes in his career. One of the fight doctors who has examined Tyson's battered opponents says that boxing trainers have a trick for treating black eyes that you can use outside the ring.

MEDICAL ALERT


How's Your Vision?

For a black eye, you need to see your doctor when you have a hard time seeing any doctor.

"If your vision is impaired, you have pain in your eye, you're light sensitive, you have double or blurred vision, or you have things floating through your field of vision," says Keith Sivertson, M.D. "that's the time you need medical care."

"It's not so much how it looks looking in but how it looks looking out," he says.

"Trainers use on the boxer's eye what looks like a small metal iron," says ophthalmologist Dave Smith, M.D., a member of the Medical Advisory Council of the State Athletic Control Board of the State of New Jersey, who has examined over 300 boxers for eye injuries. "It is extremely cold, and they use it to control the immediate hemorrhage so that the swelling is minimized. You can use the same sort of treatment by getting a cold soda can and holding it against the eye intermittently (5 to 10 minutes of every 15 minutes) until you can get some ice on it, says Dr. Smith. "Make sure the can is clean and then hold it lightly against your cheek, not your eye. Do not put any pressure on your eyeball."

Enjoy the show. Once the eye bruises, there's not a whole lot you can do except control the swelling. Even makeup can't disguise it totally. Most black eyes will last about a week, and it's a colorful week at that.

"The injury starts out black," says Keith Sivertson, M.D., director of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland. "Then as it starts to heal, it will turn green, then yellow, and finally it just disappears."

Avoid aspirin. Aspirin may be bad news for those with black eyes. Acetaminophen is what doctors recommend most. "Aspirin is an anticoagulant, meaning the blood won't clot as well. You'll have a harder time stopping the bleeding that causes the discoloration," says Dr. Jeffers. "You may wind up with a bigger bruise." If for some reason you need to take a pain reliever, take acetaminophen.

Don't blow your nose. If it was a severe blow that caused your black eye (something more than just bumping into a door), blowing your nose could cause your face to blow up like a balloon. "Sometimes the injury fractures the bone of the eye socket, and blowing your nose can force air out of your sinus adjacent to the socket," says Dr. Jeffers. "The air gets injected under your skin and makes the eyelids swell even more. It also can increase the chance of infection."

PANEL OF ADVISERS


Jack Jeffers, M.D., is an ophthalmologist and director of emergency services at the Sports Center for Vision at Wills Eye Hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Keith Sivertson, M.D., is director of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland.

Dave Smith, M.D., is an ophthalmologist in private practice in Ventnor City, New Jersey, and a member of the Medical Advisory Council of the State Athletic Control Board of the State of New Jersey. He is also on the medical team at the Sports Center for Vision at Wills Eye Hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Previous Chapter Bites
Next Chapter Sodium

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