





Recommended for nighttime use to relieve dry eyes, eyeball coma, water deficiency dry eye, floppy eye syndrome, and recurrent keratos. Can be used with CPAP or for air travel. Over 18 million Americans suffer from sleeping apnea and are forced to use CPAP at night to ensure proper breathing. Often air leaks from the CPAP can cause eye dryness, discomfort, and sleep disorders. The soft and flexible Eye Seal 4.0 is made of medical grade thermal plastic and has been proven to help relieve dry eyes during rest or sleep. The one-piece design is gently placed on the orbital bone, leaving room for blink and protecting your eyes from draft, dust, low humidity environments and air leaks from CPAP. Adjustable microfiber head wrap Eyeseals 4.0 keeps dry air comfortable and creates a moisturizing environment for your eyes, eyelids and surrounding skin. Wake up, bright, refreshed and moisturized. Masks are hypoallergenic, latex-free and made in the USA. Need a sleep mask, which one would you choose? We offer 3 moisturizing night shelters to match the structure of your face: eyeseals 4.0, tranquilees, and silicone shields Onyix/Quartz. Our Eye Seal 4.0 is located on the orbital bone. Recommended for people who want to blink freely or if you have dry eyes at night, CPAP users with eye fungus (black), partial mask (clear), those with long eyelashes, or for those who want to blink freely, or for the reoccurrence of the keratofascia. Our tranquility sits on the orbital bone, with visco elastic foam and foam inserts that can be soaked in water to increase humidity. Recommended for night dry eyes, eyes, air journeys and rearring the kernel petals. The smallest onyx/quartz is made of silicone and is placed inside the orbital bone. Recommended for night dry eyes, lagophthalmos (Onyix), CPAP users with full mask (quartz), patients with small and narrow faces, and air travel. Review: Comfortable. Seals well. Works as I need it to. I actually bought this to address ocular hypertension that is exacerbated by side sleeping. There are medical studies about it, and the use of goggles to try to prevent pressing your face (and thus lower eye...) into the pillow while side sleeping. The study I read showed 2x-4x increase in internal eye pressure due to this while, and googles used in the study (not EyeSeals, but no product was named) nearly eliminated it. Eye pressure rises at night naturally due to being horizontal, but preventing mashing your eye into the pillow greatly addresses the huge spikes in pressure that were seen in the study. The EyeSeals trap a decent amount of moisture in them, which is their designed purpose. I've not found a downside to that, even though my eyes close fully and I don't require this capability. The googles do leave a light imprint from pressing on my face, but it is nothing like, say, swim goggles. I don't tighten the EyeSeals all that tight. And the imprint is gone after 30 min or so after getting up. I clean the goggles daily using a dab of handsoap and water. Rinse them well. Drying can be a problem if the towel I use sheds any lint at all, because the EyeSeals are a bit tacky. EyeSeals seem to run large, so keep that in mind. I'm a 6'4" guy and they would be a problem for even me if they were a bit larger. But they work well for me as is. Anyway, hope it achieves what I need, because glaucoma (retina/optic nerve damage from high eye pressure) is a big deal. Cross fingers, I'm okay so far. But I came across this potential issue from sleeping and hope the EyeSeals do the job. The proof will be at my next eye checkup. I'll tell my doctor about the goggles and see what he thinks. UPDATE: The fully sealed nature of the goggles would result in increased air pressure against the eye if, say, I pressed my eye against the pillow while side sleeping. It was pressure that I could notice and try to prevent while conscious, but once asleep it would happen for an unknown period of time. Not good for a guy trying to eliminate external pressure against the eye. Solution: I used a leather punch -- the kind for putting holes in belts -- to punch a small hole in each lens. I first tried using a small drill, but the material is too flexible for that to work well. The punch appears to have worked great. It's an inexpensive punch you can buy here on desertcart or many other places. I've been using the goggles with the vent holes for a week now. It completely prevents the air-pressure issue. Surprisingly, it appears to have not lowered the moisture content in the goggles by any appreciable amount. I still have dripping condensation in each eye cup in the morning. So if this idea appeals to you to reduce eye pressure but you are concerned about losing moisture, well, in my case that has not been a problem. YMMV. Review: Just getting use to them in bed but hope they work for me the quality is good and design is good too









| ASIN | B01J6JELTG |
| ASIN | B01J6JELTG |
| Customer Reviews | 3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars (707) |
| Date First Available | April 25, 2019 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | ES400 |
| Package Dimensions | 23.01 x 9.8 x 3.61 cm; 100 g |
| Package Dimensions | 23.01 x 9.8 x 3.61 cm; 100 g |
| Target Age Range Description | 大人 |
M**S
Comfortable. Seals well. Works as I need it to. I actually bought this to address ocular hypertension that is exacerbated by side sleeping. There are medical studies about it, and the use of goggles to try to prevent pressing your face (and thus lower eye...) into the pillow while side sleeping. The study I read showed 2x-4x increase in internal eye pressure due to this while, and googles used in the study (not EyeSeals, but no product was named) nearly eliminated it. Eye pressure rises at night naturally due to being horizontal, but preventing mashing your eye into the pillow greatly addresses the huge spikes in pressure that were seen in the study. The EyeSeals trap a decent amount of moisture in them, which is their designed purpose. I've not found a downside to that, even though my eyes close fully and I don't require this capability. The googles do leave a light imprint from pressing on my face, but it is nothing like, say, swim goggles. I don't tighten the EyeSeals all that tight. And the imprint is gone after 30 min or so after getting up. I clean the goggles daily using a dab of handsoap and water. Rinse them well. Drying can be a problem if the towel I use sheds any lint at all, because the EyeSeals are a bit tacky. EyeSeals seem to run large, so keep that in mind. I'm a 6'4" guy and they would be a problem for even me if they were a bit larger. But they work well for me as is. Anyway, hope it achieves what I need, because glaucoma (retina/optic nerve damage from high eye pressure) is a big deal. Cross fingers, I'm okay so far. But I came across this potential issue from sleeping and hope the EyeSeals do the job. The proof will be at my next eye checkup. I'll tell my doctor about the goggles and see what he thinks. UPDATE: The fully sealed nature of the goggles would result in increased air pressure against the eye if, say, I pressed my eye against the pillow while side sleeping. It was pressure that I could notice and try to prevent while conscious, but once asleep it would happen for an unknown period of time. Not good for a guy trying to eliminate external pressure against the eye. Solution: I used a leather punch -- the kind for putting holes in belts -- to punch a small hole in each lens. I first tried using a small drill, but the material is too flexible for that to work well. The punch appears to have worked great. It's an inexpensive punch you can buy here on Amazon or many other places. I've been using the goggles with the vent holes for a week now. It completely prevents the air-pressure issue. Surprisingly, it appears to have not lowered the moisture content in the goggles by any appreciable amount. I still have dripping condensation in each eye cup in the morning. So if this idea appeals to you to reduce eye pressure but you are concerned about losing moisture, well, in my case that has not been a problem. YMMV.
M**E
Just getting use to them in bed but hope they work for me the quality is good and design is good too
A**E
Zu kurze Haltbarkeit für den Preis. Eine Garantie wird nicht gewährt!!
L**E
It really helps to prevent my eyes from getting dry when I sleep in my air-conditioned room. But it is not cheap. However, it is worth the money.
A**R
This is the second Eyeseals 4.0 Hydrating Sleep Mask that I've purchased. (My first one was almost 3 years old and had become too stretched from years of use.) I cannot be without it after having had severe dry eye issues and corneal tears a few years ago. I sleep with eye ointment in and this mask on and my eyes have remained healthy since. Putting a drop of water in each eye cup of the mask is also recommended and helps retain humidity around your eyes all night long. If you suffer from dry eyes, I highly recommend investing in this.
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