- Informal. A danger signal on a railroad.
- Slang. A late-night or overnight flight: caught the redeye from Los Angeles to New York.
- Any of several fishes with red eyes, as the rock bass.
- Slang. Inferior whiskey.
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The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a night flight from which the passengers emerge with eyes red from lack of sleep
| ICD-10 | H57.9 |
|---|---|
| ICD-9 | 379.93 |
| DiseasesDB | 18665 |
In medicine, red eye is a non-specific term to describe an eye that appears red due to illness, injury, or some other condition. "Conjunctival injection" and "bloodshot eyes" are two forms of red eye.
Since it is a common affliction, it is unsurprising that primary care doctors often deal with patients with red eyes in their practices. The goal of the primary care doctor when presented with a red eye is to assess whether it is an emergency in need of referral and immediate action, or instead a benign condition that can be managed easily and effectively.
Red eye usually refers to hyperemia of the superficial blood vessels of the conjunctiva, sclera or episclera, and may be caused by diseases or disorders of these structures or adjacent structures that may affect them directly or indirectly.
There are many causes of a red eye including conjunctivitis, blepharitis, acute glaucoma, injury, subconjunctival hemorrhage, inflamed pterygium, inflamed pinguecula, and dry eye syndrome.
Some signs and symptoms of red eye represent warnings that the underlying cause is serious and requires immediate attention. The person conducting a thorough eye examination should be attentive to the warning signs and symptoms during the eye exam.
There are six danger signs: conjunctival injection, ciliary flush (circumcorneal injection), corneal edema or opacities, corneal staining, abnormal pupil size, and abnormal intraocular pressure.
Reduced visual acuity is indicative of serious ocular disease, such as corneal inflammation, iridocyclitis, and glaucoma, and never occurs in simple conjunctivitis without concurrent corneal involvement.
Ciliary flush is usually present in eyes with corneal inflammation, iridocyclitis or acute glaucoma, though not simple conjunctivitis. A ciliary flush is a ring of red or violet around the cornea of the eye.
Corneal opacities always indicate that a serious disease process is in progress. Opacification may be detected using an ophthalmoscope or, in more obvious cases, with a pen light. These opacities may be keratic, haze-like (usually from corneal edema), or they may be localized such as with ulcerated corneas or those affected by keratitis.
Corneal epithelial disruptions may be detected with fluorescein staining of the eye, and careful observation with cobalt-blue light. Corneal epithelial disruptions would stain green, which represents some injury of the corneal epithelium. These types of disruptions may be due to corneal inflammations or physical trauma to the cornea.
An eye with iridocyclitis would have one pupil that is smaller than the other, which is caused by a reflex muscle spasm of the iris sphincter muscle. As is the general rule, conjunctivitis does not affect the pupils. With acute angle-closure glaucoma, the pupil would be partially dilated and oval.
Shallow anterior chamber depth usually indicates some problem. If the eye is red, anterior chamber depth may indicate acute glaucoma, which requires immediate attention.
Intraocular pressure should be measured as part of the routine eye examination. It is usually affected only by iridocyclitis or acute-closure glaucoma, but not by relatively benign conditions. In iritis and traumatic perforating ocular injuries, pressure is usually low.
Proptosis, or forward displacement of the globe, may be caused by an infection of the orbit, or a cavernous sinus disease. Most commonly, chronic proptosis is caused by thyroid diseases such as Graves disease.
There are three main danger symptoms in a red eye: reduced visual acuity, severe ocular pain, and photophobia (light sensitivity).
Blurry vision often indicates serious ocular disease. If the blurriness improves with blinking, it suggests ocular surface discharge of some variety.
Those suffering from conjunctivitis may report mild irritation or scratchiness, but never extreme pain. Severe pain is an indicator of keratitis, corneal ulceration, iridocyclitis, or acute glaucoma.
Photophobia, or fear of light, is usually an indication of iritis.
Coloured halos are an indication of corneal edema, and are a warning that acute glaucoma may be present.
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
Dansk (Danish)
n. - røde øjne (på foto), [zool.] rudskalle, (dårlig) whisky, tomatketchup
idioms:
Français (French)
n. - (US) vol de nuit, panneau de signalisation danger (sur une voie ferrée), whisky bon marché (arg)
adj. - aux yeux rouges (dû à un vol de nuit)
idioms:
Deutsch (German)
n. - (Slang) Fusel, rote Augen (auf Blitzlichtfoto)
adj. - schlaflos
idioms:
Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - κόκκινο μάτι (από φλας σε φωτογραφία), (ΗΠΑ, καθομ.) οινοπνευματώδες κακής ποιότητας (κν. μπόμπα)
adj. - (για πτήση επιβατικού αεροσκάφους) ολονύκτια
idioms:
Italiano (Italian)
whisky scadente
idioms:
Português (Portuguese)
n. - bêbado (m)
adj. - embriagado
idioms:
idioms:
Español (Spanish)
n. - especie de perca, whisky barato, efecto fotográfico de la retina
idioms:
Svenska (Swedish)
n. - (zool) sarv (rentjur)
adj. - rödögd
中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
夜航航班, 廉价威士忌酒
idioms:
中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 夜航航班, 廉價威士忌酒
idioms:
한국어 (Korean)
n. - 미국 동부산 개복치의 일종, 북미산 붉은 살모사의 일종, 싸구려 위스키
日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 夜間飛行便, 安物ウイスキー
idioms:
עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ויסקי חזק, אדום-עין, קוקטייל בירה ומיץ עגבניות (קנדה)
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