Health condition · plain-language reference
Pink Eye
Also called: Conjunctivitis
Conjunctivitis is the medical name for pink eye. It involves inflammation of the outer layer of the eye and inside of the eyelid. It can cause swelling, itching, burning, discharge, and redness. Causes include: Bacterial or viral infection Allergies Substances that cause irritation Contact lens products, eye drops, or eye ointments Pink eye usually does not affect vision. Infectious pink eye can easily spread from one person to another. The infection will clear in most cases without medical care, but bacterial pink eye needs treatment with antibiotic eye drops or ointment. NIH: National Eye Institute
Plain-language summary from MedlinePlus (NIH/NLM) ↗. For informational purposes only — not medical advice.
Medications used for pink eye
Drugs whose FDA labeling names this condition among its indications — informational, not a recommendation.
- Sulfacetamide›
- Loteprednol Etabonate›
- Carbinoxamine›
- GatifloxacinQuinolone Antimicrobial [EPC]›
- Neomycin Sulfate, Polymyxin B Sulfate, and DexamethasoneCorticosteroid [EPC]›
- American house dust mite allergenic extractStandardized Insect Allergenic Extract [EPC]›
- Loteprednol Etabonate and TobramycinAminoglycoside Antibacterial [EPC]›
- Tobramycin and DexamethasoneCorticosteroid [EPC]›
- Bepotastine›
- FluorometholoneCorticosteroid [EPC]›
- Polymyxin B Sulfate and Trimethoprim SulfateDihydrofolate Reductase Inhibitor Antibacterial [EPC]›
- Bacitracin Zinc and Polymyxin B Sulfate›
- Bacitracin Zinc and Polymyxin B Sulfates›
- BesifloxacinQuinolone Antimicrobial [EPC]›
- Epinastine›
- NatamycinPolyene Antimicrobial [EPC]›
- Neomycin and Polymyxin B Sulfates and DexamethasoneCorticosteroid [EPC]›
- Neomycin Sulfate and Polymyxin B Sulfate, Bacitracin Zinc and HydrocortisoneCorticosteroid [EPC]›
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