Your eye will get glossy and red then it will swell up and burn
Wash it out with regular water or have someone blow into it.
it depends on what you get in your eye. Ususally rinsing with water or eye rinse does the trick.
Yes it can! An eye infection can occur due to repetitive snorting of cocaine over a period of days and weeks. Cocaine can irritate the eye cavity causing an infection to the eye. Most regular cocaine users will normally have blocked or infected sinus which will only help to the risk of infection to the nose, ears, eyes, and throat. See your doctor for some antibiotics to clear the infection and discuss your cocaine issue with regards to further infection.
years of cocaine abuse
I'm not exactly sure but I do know that cocaine in rare cases is still used in eye surgery today as a topical anesthetic so I don't see why not.
yes
No, there is only one drug with a valid use that can give a false positive for cocaine. Cocaine-hydrochloride topical solution. It is used by eye and throat surgeons as an anesthetic.
There is one prescription medication that can. Topical cocaine-hydrochloride. It is an anesthetic used mainly in eye surgery.
It is used to manufacture Cocaine. It is primarily used for eye surgery.
Henry W. Williams has written: 'A practical guide to the study of the diseases of the eye' -- subject(s): Eye, Ophthalmology, Vision Tests, Eye Diseases, Diseases 'Our eyes, and how to take care of them' -- subject(s): Eye, Eye Diseases, Diseases 'Recent advances in ophthalmic science' 'Cocaine in ophthalmic medicine and surgery' -- subject(s): Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures, Ophthalmology, Eye, Therapeutic use, Cocaine, Surgery 'The diagnosis and treatment of the diseases of the eye' -- subject(s): Eye, Diseases
people used cocaine as a sort of local anesthetic during the surgery of ear, eye and throat. Lately synthetic anesthetics like lidocaine have replaced cocaine, though in many surgical procedures it still has limited uses.That's why peoples use cocaine
For opthalmic local anaesthesia : it can be used as eye-drop to anaesthetize conrea or conjuctiva (due to its vasoconstrictive effect)
Yes along with many more serious side effects including death.
The the optic nerve is still connected but the signal to the brain has been disrupted. Common in high doses of cocaine, or other shock to the brain, and a symptom of some degenerative eye diseases.