My mom got bleach in her eye years ago, she irrigated it for ten minutes, and she didnt do anything about it after then. she now gets red eye, tons of dust, and eye irritation and soreness, and only in that eye. i would say that you should go and just get it checked out by a professional.
Bleach is poisonous. If you have ingested it or got it in your eye, you should go to an ER or call a Poison control center just to be safe. Bleach is a chemical, and it is very toxic.
No, bleach has no effect on changing of eye color. You will more than likely be blind, not lighter.
You should never inhale the fumes. They are very toxic. Should get away from the site
About five to seven minutes and do not touch them after the chemicals are in or else they will burn even more. do not use hot water either just cold
Yes, at least call and ask to speak with the doctor- they may need to refer you straight to the ER
The Cornea.
Eye-Sack Sing-er
"Iyre" is typically pronounced as "eye-er."
Bleach or (most) other things in the eyes must be rinsed out immediately. It's a must. You absolutely must get to a doctor, but the first aid is lots and lots of water across the eyes. Now. It's first aid, isn't it? This is classic first aid. It is one of a number of things that allows immediate, non-professional intervention to execute the best option for damage control in a situation where life and/or health are at stake. Think about it like this. Picture a hospital custodial employee who was working in an ER lobby reaching down and picking up an open bottle of bleach. His finger slips out of the grip, and the bottle falls a foot or two to the floor to land on its bottom. Liquid bleach splashes up out of the bottle and hits the staffer in his eyes. This happens in an ER setting. A medical staffer (physician, nurse, nursing assistant - or another custodial staffer) will immediately get the individual to a sink and start running water to irrigate the eyes of the affected individual. Just like you would do. It's just that simple.
Er...eye shadow?
eye paa {er yeh par}
Flush with copious amounts of water if possible, and head to the ER. Until you get to the hospital, there is really nothing you can do. If something is penetrating your eye, DO NOT remove it.