When someone is told they have a symblepharon for the first time, the name itself can sound more frightening than the condition. Many patients come to the clinic saying, “Doctor, my report says symblepharon eye. Does that mean my eyelid is stuck to my eye forever?”
The truth is that symblepharon is a serious sign that the surface of the eye has been damaged and has healed with scarring. It needs careful attention at a specialised eye hospital, but with proper treatment and follow‑up, we can usually improve comfort, protect vision, and reduce the chances of the scarring getting worse.
What Is Symblepharon in Simple Language?
The surface of your eye is lined by a thin, smooth membrane called the conjunctiva. One part covers the white of the eye (bulbar conjunctiva), and another lines the inside of the eyelids (palpebral conjunctiva).
Symblepharon happens when these two layers lose their normal smoothness and start sticking to each other. Instead of gliding freely when you blink, the inner eyelid and the eyeball become joined by bands of scar tissue.
In many people, this scar looks like a pale or reddish band stretching from the inner eyelid to the white of the eye. In advanced cases, it can pull on the eyelid, shallow the fornix (the fold between lid and eye), and even affect how well you can move or close the eye.
Why Does Symblepharon Eye Develop?
Symblepharon does not appear out of nowhere. It usually follows a strong insult to the eye surface, such as severe inflammation, chemical injury, or an autoimmune disease that attacks the conjunctiva.
Here is an overview of common causes:
| Cause group | Examples | How it leads to symblepharon |
| Severe surface inflammation | Stevens–Johnson syndrome, ocular cicatricial pemphigoid, chronic cicatrising conjunctivitis | These conditions destroy the conjunctival surface. When raw areas of the eyelid and eyeball touch, they heal together and form adhesions. |
| Chemical and thermal burns | Alkali or acid burns, firework or heat injuries | Chemicals and heat strip away the outer conjunctival layer, leaving bare inflamed tissue that scars and sticks. |
| Infections and chronic conjunctivitis | Severe bacterial, viral or chlamydial conjunctivitis, epidemic keratoconjunctivitis | Long‑lasting infection with scarring can create bands between the lid and eye. |
| Trauma and surgery | Penetrating injuries, pterygium surgery, other conjunctival surgeries | If healing is not guided properly, post‑surgical or traumatic scars can bridge the gap between eyelid and globe. |
| Rare congenital forms | Cryptophthalmos and other developmental anomalies | Some babies are born with the conjunctiva fused due to abnormal formation of the eyelids. |
Whatever the original cause, the basic story is the same: conjunctival tissue is damaged, raw surfaces are left facing each other, and when they heal, they form a fibrous bridge we call symblepharon.
How Symblepharon Eye Feels: Symptoms Patients Notice
Some people can actually see the band of tissue when they gently pull the lower lid down in a mirror. Others mainly feel the effects rather than seeing the scar itself.
The table below summarises typical symptoms:
| Symptom | How patients describe it |
| Feeling that the eyelid is “stuck” | The eye does not move freely, resulting in pulling or tightness when looking to the side. |
| Difficulty opening or closing the eye fully | The lid may not open wide, or full closure is difficult, especially during sleep. |
| Chronic irritation and redness | Burning, foreign‑body sensation, watering, and redness due to disturbed tear film and exposed areas. |
| Restricted eye movements and double vision | In more advanced cases, adhesions limit globe movement, sometimes causing double vision. |
| Cosmetic changes | Shortened fornix or visible web‑like tissue between eyelid and eye, which can be distressing to look at. |
If the scarring is severe and involves the cornea as well, it can also lead to blurred vision, recurrent erosions, and a painful eye, especially in advanced chronic cicatrising diseases.
How Do Eye Specialists Diagnose Symblepharon?
In many cases, the diagnosis is made simply by examining the eye on the slit lamp. The scar bands are usually visible once we gently pull the lid away from the globe.
For a more complete picture, your doctor may also:
| Assessment | What we look for | Why it matters |
| Detailed slit‑lamp exam | Location and extent of adhesions, condition of conjunctiva and cornea | Helps grade severity and plan how extensive the surgery will need to be. |
| Fornix depth evaluation | How deep the upper and lower fornices are | Severe symblepharon can completely obliterate the fornix, affecting lid movement and prosthesis fitting. |
| Tear film and dry‑eye tests | Schirmer test, staining with special dyes | Many patients have significant dry eye that must be treated alongside the scarring. |
| Photographs and imaging | Serial clinical photos, sometimes anterior segment OCT | Helpful to monitor progression over time and document response to treatment. |
| Systemic evaluation | Screening for autoimmune conditions or skin diseases | Important because some causes, like ocular cicatricial pemphigoid, need systemic treatment, not just local eye care. |
All these pieces together help us design a personalized plan at an eye specialist hospital rather than using a single standard approach for every symblepharon eye.
Why Symblepharon Is a Concern for Eye Health
Patients often ask, “If I can still see reasonably well, do I really need to worry?” The concern is not just the scar itself, but the long‑term changes it can bring if left untreated.
| Problem | How symblepharon contributes |
| Chronic dry eye and irritation | Scarred conjunctiva and distorted fornix reduce the tear reservoir and disrupt normal tear spread, leading to constant dryness and discomfort. |
| Repeated infections and inflammation | Poor tear film and exposed areas are more prone to recurrent conjunctivitis and surface breakdown. |
| Corneal damage and scarring | If the scar pulls onto the cornea or causes eyelid malposition, the clear corneal surface can become scarred and cloudy. |
| Difficulty fitting contact lenses or prosthesis | Obliterated fornix and tight tissues make lens or prosthetic fitting very challenging. |
| Painful blind eye in extreme cases | In advanced chronic conditions, the main goal may shift from restoring vision to achieving a comfortable, pain‑free eye. |
Because of these risks, we usually advise patients not to ignore symblepharon, especially when it is linked with an active disease like Stevens–Johnson syndrome or ocular cicatricial pemphigoid. Early referral to a centre experienced in ocular surface eye treatments can make a big difference.
Symblepharon Treatment: Medical and Surgical Options
There is no single eye‑drop that can dissolve a symblepharon band once it has formed. Treatment focuses on controlling the underlying disease, releasing the scar, and preventing it from simply coming back.
Medical Management
In the early or active inflammatory phase, we concentrate on calming the surface and preventing new adhesions from forming.
| Goal | Typical measures |
| Control inflammation | Lubricants, topical steroids or immunomodulators, and systemic immunosuppressive therapy when autoimmune disease is present, under close supervision. |
| Protect the ocular surface | Frequent preservative‑free artificial tears and ointments, moisture goggles, and bandage contact lenses in selected cases. |
| Prevent further adhesions | Use of symblepharon rings or conformers in some patients to keep the lids and globe separated while healing occurs. |
Even once surgery is planned, this medical phase remains crucial because active inflammation or uncontrolled autoimmune disease can undo a carefully done operation.
Surgical Treatment Options
When the scar is already established and affecting function or comfort, surgery becomes the main pillar of symblepharon eye treatment.
Most modern approaches follow a broad sequence: release the scar, resurface the raw area, and then maintain the new space while it heals.
| Surgical step | What is done | Notes |
| Symblepharon lysis | The scar bands between lid and globe are carefully dissected and released. | Restores movement and depth of the fornix but leaves raw surfaces that must be covered. |
| Surface reconstruction | The exposed area is covered with amniotic membrane, conjunctival autograft, oral mucosal graft, or a combination. | Amniotic membrane transplantation has been shown to promote healing and reduce scarring when combined with other methods. |
| Mechanical separation | Symblepharon rings, conformers, or anchoring sutures are used to keep the lid and eye apart during healing. | These act like internal “spacers” so the surfaces do not stick together again. |
| Additional procedures | Eyelid surgery, limbal stem‑cell transplantation or keratoplasty in selected cases. | Needed when there is associated lid malposition, limbal deficiency or corneal scarring. |
The exact combination is chosen based on the severity of the symblepharon eye, the presence of dry eye or limbal stem‑cell deficiency, and the underlying cause. This is why surgery is best done at a tertiary eye hospital with a team experienced in ocular surface reconstruction.
Recovery, Prognosis and Living with Symblepharon
Recovery from symblepharon surgery is gradual. In the early weeks, it is normal to feel some tightness and foreign‑body sensation as the graft and surrounding tissues heal. Frequent follow‑up visits are essential so that any early re‑adhesion can be treated promptly.
The long‑term outcome depends on three main factors:
| Factor | Influence on prognosis |
| Control of the underlying disease | If autoimmune or cicatrising disease remains active, new scars can form despite good surgery. |
| Severity of initial damage | Eyes with severe chemical burns or long‑standing inflammation have more altered tissue and may need repeated procedures. |
| Quality of surface reconstruction | Appropriate use of amniotic membrane, mucosal grafts, and good post‑operative care improves fornix depth and comfort. |
In some patients, the realistic goal is to maintain a comfortable, moist eye with reasonable appearance and stable vision, rather than perfection. Low‑vision aids, protective glasses, and lifestyle adjustments can all help daily functioning when vision has been affected.
The most important message I share with patients is this: if you have a symblepharon eye, you are not alone, and it is not a condition you have to manage by yourself. Early involvement in an eye specialist hospital, consistent follow‑up, and a combination of medical and surgical eye treatments can make a real difference in how your eyes feel and how well you see over the years.
Frequently Asked Questions
Symblepharon is a condition that causes the inner surface of the eyelid to scar and stick to the white of the eye which in turn forms a visible pale or red band of tissue. In mild cases it may only cause discomfort in more advanced cases it may restrict eye movement and close off the natural fold between the lid and eyeball.
The primary causes are severe chemical or thermal burns, autoimmune conditions such as Stevens–Johnson syndrome and ocular cicatricial pemphigoid, chronic conjunctivitis with scarring, and post surgical or traumatic injuries. Also in very rare cases it may be present at birth as a result of abnormal eyelid development.
In the beginning and during the active inflammatory phase medical management which includes the use of lubricants, topical steroids, immunomodulators and symblepharon rings is effective in managing the condition and to also prevent it from getting worse. Once the scar tissue has fully developed and is to a degree that it affects function surgery is usually required to release and repair the affected area.
Vision impact depends on the severity. Mild symblepharon may cause no vision loss, while advanced cases especially those involving corneal scarring or eyelid malposition can affect clarity of sight. With timely treatment at a specialised eye hospital, vision can often be stabilised and comfort significantly improved.
Warning signs of progression include increasing tightness or pulling when moving the eye, difficulty fully opening or closing the eyelid, worsening dryness and redness, double vision, and a visibly growing web of tissue between the lid and eye. If you notice any of these changes, prompt review at an eye specialist hospital is strongly advised.
References
- American Academy of Ophthalmology (EyeWiki). Symblepharon. https://eyewiki.aao.org/Symblepharon
- National Eye Institute (NEI). Facts About Dry Eye. https://www.nei.nih.gov/learn-about-eye-health/eye-conditions-and-diseases/dry-eye
- MedlinePlus / National Library of Medicine. Stevens-Johnson Syndrome. https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/000851.htm
- Cleveland Clinic. Conjunctivitis (Pink Eye): Causes & Treatment. https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/conjunctivitis-pink-eye
- NCBI/NIH. Amniotic Membrane Transplantation in Ocular Surface Reconstruction. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3589184/
