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what causes bleeding from the eyes

Bleeding from the eyes (or seeing blood in/on the eye or in tears) is usually a sign of a broken blood vessel in or around the eye, and the cause can range from harmless to vision‑threatening.

Quick Scoop: Main Causes

1. “Red Patch” On the White of the Eye

This is often a subconjunctival hemorrhage – a small blood vessel breaks under the clear surface covering the white of the eye.

Common triggers include:

  • Sudden strain: heavy lifting, forceful coughing, sneezing, vomiting, or straining on the toilet.
  • Minor eye trauma: rubbing the eye, a small foreign body, contact lens irritation, mild injury.
  • Eye infections or inflammation: conjunctivitis makes vessels fragile and easier to rupture.
  • Blood‑thinner medicines: aspirin, warfarin, some anti‑inflammatories increasing bleeding tendency.
  • Blood‑clotting problems: low platelets, hemophilia, von Willebrand disease, some anemias or leukemias.

This type looks dramatic but is often painless and usually clears on its own in 1–2 weeks.

2. Blood Collecting Inside the Front of the Eye (Hyphema)

Here, blood pools in the front chamber between the cornea and iris, sometimes visible as a fluid level.

Key causes:

  • Direct blunt injury to the eye: sports (ball to the eye), fist, accident.
  • Post‑surgery changes: after cataract or other eye operations.
  • Abnormal or fragile blood vessels in the iris or angle of the eye.

Hyphema is more serious: it can raise pressure inside the eye and threaten vision, and it needs urgent eye‑doctor care.

3. Bleeding Deeper in the Eye (Retina/Vitreous/Choroid)

You may not see blood on the surface, but vision changes show something is bleeding inside.

Typical signs:

  • Sudden floaters, cobwebs, or dark spots.
  • A reddish haze, shadows, or a “curtain” over part of vision.
  • Sudden drop in vision in one eye.

Common causes:

  • Diabetic retinopathy: fragile new retinal vessels that break easily.
  • High blood pressure: damages retinal vessels, causing “flame‑shaped” hemorrhages.
  • Retinal tears or detachments: a torn vessel leaks into the vitreous gel.
  • Age‑related macular degeneration: can cause subretinal and submacular hemorrhage.
  • Intracranial bleeding and Terson’s syndrome: brain hemorrhage leading to retinal/vitreous bleeding.
  • Blood cancers (like leukemia) and other systemic diseases that weaken vessels or clotting.

These are vision‑threatening and need prompt specialist assessment.

4. Bloody Tears (Hemolacria – “Bleeding From the Eyes”)

True blood in the tears can look like the eye is crying blood.

Possible reasons include:

  • Local problems: severe conjunctivitis, trauma to eyelids or conjunctiva, infections or inflammation of the tear ducts.
  • Tumors: in the eye, eyelid, conjunctiva, or tear system (rare but serious).
  • Severe systemic disorders: some blood cancers or clotting disorders.

Because hemolacria is uncommon and sometimes linked to tumors or serious disease, it should always be checked by a doctor.

Systemic (Whole‑Body) Conditions Behind Eye Bleeding

Sometimes the eye is where a body‑wide problem first shows up.

Important underlying causes:

  • High blood pressure.
  • Diabetes and high cholesterol.
  • Blood‑clotting disorders (hemophilia, von Willebrand disease, thrombocytopenia).
  • Blood cancers (like leukemia).
  • Severe reactions affecting skin and mucous membranes, such as Stevens‑Johnson syndrome.

Treating only the eye is not enough in these cases; the underlying condition must be controlled.

When It’s an Emergency

Seek urgent medical/eye‑doctor care or emergency care if:

  1. There is eye bleeding plus pain, light sensitivity, or sudden blurry or lost vision.
  2. Blood fills part of the colored part or front of the eye (suspected hyphema).
  3. You had a blow to the eye or head and then notice eye bleeding or vision changes.
  4. You have repeated eye bleeds, bleeding from several sites (nose, gums, bruises), or known clotting problems.
  5. A child develops eye bleeding for any reason.

If you or someone else has active eye bleeding now, treat this as a medical issue and get in‑person evaluation as soon as possible.

Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.