I would suggest water. You would need to try and get it all out very quickly. I would contact the manufacturer of the cleaning solution, and ask them what is best to do. It will very likely say on the bottle, or container e.g: Go to a hospital immediately.
Rinse the eye with cold water for several minutes.
Rinse your eye with water for 15 minutes, preferably at an eye wash station. You need to hold your eye open while you are rinsing it.
Well, it's probably too late now, but if it happens again to your remaining eye, wash it out quickly with large quantities of water and have someone call an ambulance or at least take you to an emergency room. The important thing is to rinse it out quickly and thoroughly. Anywhere you're working with acidic solutions you should have an eye wash station nearby; if nothing else there should be a squeeze bottle containing a specially formulated buffer solution you can use to flush your eye with.
Wash with water in approx 20 min and then go to eye doctor for treatment for severity
if you get cleaning products in your eye for in your mouth
socket for cleaning copper pipe
solution
I just got contacts last month and I have been putting in my lens with some solution on it so I think its safe to put them in with solution. Answer 2: It depends on the solution you are using. Most solutions are "Saline", which is basically salt water and safe to put into your eye. Some brands offer "Cleaning" solutions and "Soaking" solutions as a system for cleaning your contacts better; in this case it is common that the cleaning solution may not be safe for your eye. Read the packaging information on your solution(s) for proper usage. The cleaning system that I fell in love with was "Clean Care". It comes with a special contact cleaning case and a Hydrogen Peroxide solution, which as it is will burn the hell out of your eyes. You fill the vial and put the contacts into it, and a chemical reaction caused by the vial make bubbles that scrub your contacts for you so they get incredibly clean and you don't run the risk of accidentally tearing them. Once the chemical reaction is completed (6 hours), all that's left of the solution is regular saline solution. I've been using this brand for 8, maybe 10 months now and my contacts have never felt better! I wait the full 6 hours (somtimes longer) each and have never felt any stinging when I put them in.
Flush the eye with fresh water for 20 minutes. Call 911. Cover the eye loosely with a sterile dressing after flushing. DO NOT try to counter the acid with an alkaline -- it tends to cause an exothermic reaction and do heat damage.
no
for minior injuris an opthamologist should evaluate you
They are glands near the eye that produce tears, or the solution that covers your eye.