- Wash abundantly with warm water your eyes as soon as possible.
- Go to an ophthalmologist.
In almost all cases, you will do no harm by flushing the eyes with sterile water, distilled water, normal saline or, failing that, whatever clean water is available. Very few chemical agents react with water. Further treatment depends on which agent it is. If the specific agent is not known, standard NBC exposure precautions and reactions should be followed.
simply i will rinse it with water or get my eyes and cleaned it
reactants
Reduction is a process that occurs in a chemical reaction that goes hand-in-hand with a process called oxidation. Elements begin the reaction with a certain oxidation state, however sometimes after they react to form a new product they assume a different oxidation state. The only way to do this is through a transfer of electrons. In a reduction-oxidation (redox) reaction, the element that gains electrons is called the oxidizing agent, and the element losing electrons is called the reducing agent. The oxidizing agent oxidizes the reducing agent, and the reducing agent reduces the oxidizing agent. Breakdown: Losing electrons is oxidation. Gaining electrons is reduction.
The results of a chemical reaction are called the products, and the reactants are what goes into the reaction
Lots of clean water.
The First Thing i Will Do Is to rinse it with clean water...
Flush with water until EMS arrives.
Try to flush out your eyes with water. DO NOT RUB, and try not to close your eyes. I know it burns but try not to.
Flush the eyes with large amounts of water for 15 minutes minimum. If only 1 eye is contaminated, do not flush down into the other eye.
There are a number of things that you can do when a sanitizing agent gets into your eyes. The immediate thing to do would be to flush and rinse your eyes with lots of clean water and this should help the situation.
In almost all cases, you will do no harm by flushing the eyes with sterile water, distilled water, normal saline or, failing that, whatever clean water is available. Very few chemical agents react with water. Further treatment depends on which agent it is. If the specific agent is not known, standard NBC exposure precautions and reactions should be followed.
Flush the eyes with large amounts of water for 15 minutes minimum. If only 1 eye is contaminated, do not flush down into the other eye.
simply i will rinse it with water or get my eyes and cleaned it
This depends on the chemical.An emetic may bring up the chemicals, and a lot of water may dilute them.For dangerous chemicals you may need to seek help immediately by calling 911 (or 999 in the UK).
You first read the label for first aid info. You would normally flush out your eyes with COLD water for a few minutes. If it is really bad, call poison control at 1-800-222-1222.
Bacterial conjunctivitis causes sore eyes. The redness of the eyes goes together with swelling of the eyelid. Anesthetic eye drops can be used to relieve the pain.