Tear duct.
The purpose is to keep the eye moist, instead of dry as well as to maintain a proper PH balance.
It is best to avoid any product getting in your eyes. I don't understand how a product can be icy and hot at the same time? Try washing the eyes in water (or a saline solution) to try to dilute and wash away the 'product'. In a factory, regulations state that where there is a danger of something getting into a worker's eyes, saline solution bottles, with eye bath tops, should be close at hand - and goggles should be worn.
Yes it can. That is all that most eye washes/drops are; salt water (with some preservative added in). You can even make your own if you have distilled water and salt. Make sure to use distilled water because water carries contaminants very well. And use what you make right away since your not adding a preservative.
Cysts of the eye are called chalazions. They are caused by obstruction of an oil gland in the eyelid. Chalazions usually go away without medical intervention.
lacrimal
lacrimal gland
Yes. The pineal gland produces melatonin. The pineal gland is also known as a "third eye" for intuition.
Saline is salt water. It may add to the problem.
A Pope's Eye is a Scottish term for an edible sheep's gland. The gland is a lymph gland surrounded by fat in the leg of the sheep.
The lacrimal gland secretes tears
Yes. It's the same gland known to produce a third eye in reptiles.
Yes
Eye wash is usually sterile saline solution so that it does not burn or sting when placed on the eye.
Ahh yes tHat would be the eye gland
Rinsing the eye, usually with large amounts of normal saline, to remove chemicals or foreign bodies.
They have been around forever. Eye drops are saline-containing drops used as a route to administer medication in the eye.
meibomian gland