Dry eye care in Syracuse

Dry, burning, watery eyes need a diagnosis, not guesswork.

Dry eye can feel gritty, watery, burning, tired, or blurry. Utah's dry air, screens, allergies, medications, and eyelid inflammation can all contribute.

Utah weather, screens, allergies, contact lenses, and eyelid inflammation can all play a role, so the best next step depends on what is actually causing the irritation.

Helping you see the moments that matter most means making dry eye treatment easier to understand for children, adults, and families across Syracuse, West Point, Clearfield, Clinton, and surrounding Utah communities.

Patient with dry eye symptoms receiving care in Syracuse, Utah

When to schedule

When a dry eye visit makes sense.

  • Burning, stinging, or gritty eyes
  • Watery eyes that still feel dry
  • Blur that changes through the day
  • Contact lens discomfort

What to expect

What happens during a dry eye visit.

  • Evaluation of tears, eyelids, and ocular surface
  • Recommendations for drops, lid care, lifestyle changes, or prescriptions
  • Plan for allergy or screen-related irritation when relevant
  • Follow-up care if symptoms are chronic

What to bring

What to bring to a dry eye visit.

  • Any eye drops, lid products, or medications you already use
  • Your current glasses or contact lenses
  • Notes about when symptoms are worst, including screens or allergy season

Treatment approaches

Options your doctor may discuss with you.

Every patient is different. These are the approaches the doctor considers based on your specific situation, symptoms, and lifestyle.

Artificial tears and drops

Preservative-free lubricating drops are often a first step, but the type and frequency depend on how much natural tear production you have and what kind of dry eye you have.

Lid hygiene and warm compresses

When the meibomian glands along the eyelid margin become blocked, the oil layer of the tear film breaks down quickly. Warm compresses and lid scrubs can help restore normal gland function.

Prescription medications

For patients with chronic inflammation or inadequate tear production, prescription drops like Restasis or Xiidra may be appropriate. The doctor evaluates whether this level of treatment fits your specific situation.

Allergy and screen management

For patients whose dry eye is driven by seasonal allergies or extended screen time, treatment plans include antihistamine drops, air moisture adjustments, and screen hygiene habits.

Beyond eye drops

Dry eye treatment works better when the plan matches the cause.

Some dry eye patients do not make enough tears. Others make tears that evaporate too quickly because the oil glands along the eyelids are not working well. Some are dealing with allergies, screen habits, medication side effects, contact lens irritation, or a mix of several issues at once.

That is why two people can both say their eyes feel dry and still need very different treatment plans. One person may improve with preservative-free tears and lid care. Another may need prescription medication, allergy treatment, better screen habits, or a different contact lens strategy.

A dry eye visit gives you a clearer answer than simply trying another random bottle from the shelf. We look at the tear film, lids, and surface of the eye so the treatment plan matches the reason your eyes feel irritated in the first place.

Why this matters

Why dry eye keeps coming back when the root cause is still being missed.

Dry eye is not always caused by the same thing. Some patients need better tear support, some have eyelid inflammation, some struggle with allergy-related irritation, and some notice symptoms most with screens, contacts, or Utah's dry air. A dry eye visit helps identify what is actually driving the irritation so the plan is more specific than simply trying another bottle of artificial tears.

Syracuse and Davis County

Convenient care for Syracuse and nearby west Davis County families.

Lakeview Eye Care is located at 1792 W 1700 S Suite 102, Syracuse, UT 84075. Patients visit from Syracuse and nearby West Point, Clearfield, Clinton, and Layton because the office offers careful exams, clear explanations, and practical next steps close to home.

Syracuse West PointClearfieldClintonLayton Davis County

Quick answers

Common Questions About Dry Eye Treatment

What are common signs of dry eye?

Dry eye can feel gritty, burning, watery, tired, or blurry. Symptoms often get worse with screens, Utah weather, or contact lens wear.

What happens during a dry eye visit?

The doctor looks at your tears, eyelids, and ocular surface to find the cause of the irritation. Then you get a treatment plan based on what is actually driving the symptoms.

Do you help patients from West Point or Clearfield?

Yes. Dry eye patients visit from Syracuse, West Point, Clearfield, Clinton, and surrounding Utah communities.

Will insurance cover dry eye treatment?

Coverage depends on whether the visit is medical and what your plan includes. Lakeview Eye Care can help you understand benefits before your appointment.

Medical disclaimer

Educational guidance is not the same as a diagnosis.

This information is for general educational purposes and is not a diagnosis. If you have sudden vision changes, eye pain, injury, flashes, floaters, or other urgent symptoms, call an eye care professional or seek emergency care.

Schedule with Lakeview

Need dry eye treatment?

Book online or call the Syracuse office and the team will help you choose the right visit.

Need help with coverage or common questions first? Review our insurance information or the FAQ.