Why This Matters
Long commutes with car AC blowing directly at the face, 8 or more hours of computer work in HVAC-regulated offices (where humidity is typically 30 to 40 percent), reduced blinking during screen use (you blink about 60 percent less when focused on a screen), and evening screen time for entertainment — all compound into chronic tear film instability. Denton residents who commute to Dallas, Irving, or Fort Worth get this exposure twice a day. The solution is not just 'blink more' — it is addressing the underlying gland health and tear chemistry with real treatment.
About 86 percent of dry eye is actually caused by meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD) — the oil-producing glands in your eyelids are clogged or underperforming, so your tears evaporate too fast no matter how many drops you put in. The fix is treating the glands, not endlessly replacing the tear film. At PersonalEyes, Dr. Patel uses meibography imaging to actually see the condition of your glands, then builds a treatment plan that addresses whichever combination of problems is driving your dry eye. Many patients who have been 'doing drops for years' see real improvement within a few weeks of the right treatment.
A real dry eye workup is much more than asking 'do your eyes feel dry?' We use the Topcon Myah for meibography (infrared imaging of the meibomian glands to see gland structure and dropout), tear film breakup time measurement, tear osmolarity testing, lid margin evaluation, corneal staining, and a detailed symptom questionnaire. We also look for underlying causes — autoimmune conditions like Sjögren's syndrome, medications that cause dry eye as a side effect, rosacea or blepharitis affecting the lids, and contact lens wear. Dr. Patel then creates a targeted treatment plan based on the actual findings, not a generic protocol.
Did you know? About 86 percent of dry eye is caused by meibomian gland dysfunction. That means most patients on artificial tears alone are treating the symptom, not the cause. Real treatment looks different — and works.
Common Causes
Most Denton patients have more than one driver. We screen for all of them in a single comprehensive evaluation, then build a plan that addresses the specific combination affecting you.
Book a comprehensive dry eye evaluation. We will identify the actual causes driving your symptoms and build a targeted treatment plan that does more than mask the problem.
Also see our main dry eye treatment service page or the optometrist in Denton overview.
Frequently Asked Questions
Artificial tears treat the symptom, not the cause. About 86 percent of dry eye is actually caused by meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD) — the oil-producing glands in your eyelids are clogged or underperforming, so your tears evaporate too fast no matter how many drops you put in. The fix is treating the glands, not endlessly replacing the tear film. At PersonalEyes, Dr. Patel uses meibography imaging to actually see the condition of your glands, then builds a treatment plan that addresses whichever combination of problems is driving your dry eye. Many Denton patients who have been 'doing drops for years' see real improvement within a few weeks of the right treatment.
Modern work life is essentially a dry eye factory. Long commutes with car AC blowing directly at the face, 8 or more hours of computer work in HVAC-regulated offices (where humidity is typically 30 to 40 percent), reduced blinking during screen use (you blink about 60 percent less when focused on a screen), and evening screen time for entertainment — all compound into chronic tear film instability. Denton residents who commute to Dallas, Irving, or Fort Worth are especially vulnerable because they get this exposure twice a day. The solution is not just 'blink more' — it is addressing the underlying gland health and tear chemistry with real treatment.
A real dry eye workup is much more than asking 'do your eyes feel dry?' We use the Topcon Myah for meibography (infrared imaging of the meibomian glands to see gland structure and dropout), tear film breakup time measurement, tear osmolarity testing, lid margin evaluation, corneal staining, and a detailed symptom questionnaire. We also look for underlying causes — autoimmune conditions like Sjögren's syndrome, medications that cause dry eye as a side effect, rosacea or blepharitis affecting the lids, and contact lens wear. Dr. Patel then creates a targeted treatment plan based on the actual findings, not a generic protocol.
It depends on the cause and severity. Simple meibomian gland expression combined with warm compresses and omega-3 supplementation often shows improvement within 2 to 4 weeks. More severe cases involving significant gland dropout or inflammation may require 8 to 12 weeks of consistent treatment to see meaningful relief. Dr. Patel sets realistic expectations at the first visit and follows up to adjust the plan if it is not working fast enough. Dry eye is a chronic condition in most cases — it can almost always be managed, but it usually requires ongoing attention rather than a one-time fix.
That is entirely your call — but the patients who do make the drive tell us it is. What you get at PersonalEyes is a full 45 to 90 minute exam with a board-certified Therapeutic Optometrist and Optometric Glaucoma Specialist, advanced imaging (OCT, retinal photography, visual field, meibography), and real unhurried explanations. Many Denton patients come to us after a frustrating experience at a high-volume chain clinic. The 25-to-30-minute drive down I-35E is usually well worth the difference in clinical depth.
Yes. We accept most of the vision plans offered through Denton ISD employee benefits (VSP, EyeMed, Davis Vision) as well as most medical plans used by Denton-area residents and University of North Texas / Texas Woman's University staff and students. Call before your visit and we will verify your specific plan.