Health Advice

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Head Lice – Help!!!

Every parent’s heart sinks when they receive the dreaded note from school warning about head lice. Don’t worry – Jane Brennan from Brennan’s Life Pharmacy in Donabate is here to to give us advice and tips. The first thing to do is to check the child’s head. You will need some tea tree conditioner, a... Read more >

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Are You SunSmart?

We ask Jane Brennan from Brennan’s Life Pharmacy Donabate how to make the most of great sunny summer days whilst protecting our skin from harmful rays. Jane says “The Irish Cancer Society SunSmart program has great guidelines to keep us safe. See below for some useful tips and advice” Ways to protect your skin: Shade... Read more >

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Pollen Highs & Watery Eyes

Pollen Highs & Watery Eyes… Talk to Jane Brennan, your Hay Fever Expert in Donabate Are your eyes itchy, red or watery? Is your throat scratchy? Are you sneezing? Do you have itchy ears, nose or mouth? Do you have a blocked or runny nose? Do you wake up feeling exhausted? Hay fever can cause... Read more >

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NHS Choices - Complications of a stye

(11/09/2014)

Styes usually get better without treatment. But sometimes they can cause complications which are rarely serious.

Chalazion (meibomian cyst)

A long-term stye on the inside of your eyelid (internal stye) can develop into a chalazion. Chalazions, also called meibomian cysts, can develop if one of the glands on your eyelid becomes blocked.

These cysts are usually painless unless they become infected. If they do, you may need to take antibiotics (medication to treat a bacterial infection).

Applying a warm compress (a cloth warmed with hot water) to the cyst should help bring it down, although most cysts disappear by themselves.

If a cyst doesn't disappear, it can be removed using a simple surgical procedure carried out under local anaesthetic (where the affected area is numbed).

Preseptal cellulitis

If the infection that caused your stye spreads to the tissues around your eye it can cause preseptal cellulitis.

Preseptal cellulitis, also known as periorbital cellulitis, is inflammation (redness and swelling) in the layers of skin around your eye. It can make your eyelids swollen and red and can be treated with antibiotics.

Read more about other eyelid problems.



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