How to Use Honey to Help Your Eyes.


Honey is a wonderful natural sweetener and sugar replacement. It’s also used all over the world for its antimicrobial, wound-healing, and soothing properties.

While not as popular in Western cultures, Ayurveda and other natural healing traditions have been using honey for centuries to treat health conditions of the eye.

Topically applied honey can reduce inflammation and irritation in your eye. It can also kill harmful bacteria that could be causing an eye infection.

Some people even use honey to try to gradually change the color of their eyes, although there isn’t any research to prove that it works. Keep reading to find out what we know so far about using honey as a treatment for your eyes.

Honey’s anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial properties, combined with its soothing abilities, make it a surprisingly effective treatment for several eye conditions.

All of the following home remedies for eye conditions involve mixing specialty-grade honey (like locally sourced, honeycomb, or Manuka honey) with sterile saline drops and applying the mixture topically in your eyes or on your skin.

Keratoconjunctivitis

In one studyTrusted Source involving 60 participants, artificial tears containing honey were found to be an effective treatment for keratoconjunctivitis (inflammation of the cornea due to dryness).

This chronic condition tends to appear with the onset of seasonal allergies.

Corneal ulcers

Corneal ulcers are sores on the surface of your eye’s outer layer. Honey can fight infections that might be causing the sore, as well as accelerate the healing of the ulcers themselves.

The wound-healing properties of honey, as well as its antimicrobial effects, make it uniquely suited to treat these kinds of ulcers.

Blepharitis

Blepharitis is a condition that causes swelling and burning around your eyelash line. One studyTrusted Source tested six rabbits with blepharitis to identify the potential of Manuka honey as a treatment for blepharitis.

Though we still need human trials, Manuka honey appeared to be more effective than commercial-grade honey or no treatment for getting rid of blepharitis.

Dry eyes

Dry eye happens when the tear glands that lubricate your eyes are not producing enough tears. While it’s possible to treat chronic dry eye with artificial tears, there has never been a proposed way to cure it completely.

Artificial tears with manuka honey and eye gel with Manuka honey are now being studied as a dry eye treatment. In a study of 114 people, honey treatments were found to decrease redness and discomfort in people with chronic dry eye.

Reduces wrinkles

Honey has cosmetic applications for your skin. A review of the literature shows that honey can seal in moisture and add softness to the top layer of skin, helping reduce the signs of aging.

Most chemical and even some natural anti-aging ingredients aren’t safe to use in the area under and around your eyes. Honey, on the other hand, can be mixed with saline, water, coconut oil, or jojoba oil and applied around your eyes to tighten skin.

Bacterial conjunctivitis (pink eye)

The antimicrobial properties of honey can fight a bacterial eye infection, stop it from spreading, and reduce redness, and speed healing. An older study done in 2004 analyzed honey’s antimicrobial effects against different kinds of bacteria, and demonstrated how well it can work against conjunctivitis in particular

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