Eyelid & Anterior Segment

Blepharitis & Demodex

When eyelid inflammation signals deeper trouble — lid margin disease, mite infestation, or the onset of dry eye.

About this condition

Understanding Blepharitis

Blepharitis is chronic inflammation of the eyelid margins — the rim where eyelashes grow. It’s one of the most common eye conditions we see, yet it’s vastly underdiagnosed and often mismanaged as “just dry eye.” The inflammation can be anterior (affecting the skin and lash follicles), posterior (affecting the meibomian glands under the lid), or most significantly, driven by demodex mite overgrowth.

The real insight: blepharitis is not a dead-end diagnosis. It’s a signal that something specific is wrong at the lid margin — biofilm accumulation, bacterial colonization, meibomian obstruction, or mite infestation. Each form responds to different treatment. UDEI’s job is to identify which form you have and treat it at the source, not just manage the symptom.

Why This Matters

Untreated blepharitis frequently triggers or worsens dry eye disease, contributes to chalazion recurrence, and in demodex-driven cases, continues to worsen without specific anti-parasitic therapy. Early diagnosis — particularly of the demodex subtype — unlocks targeted treatment that stops progression and restores comfort.

Patient experience

Common Symptoms

Blepharitis presents differently depending on whether it’s anterior, posterior, or demodex-driven — but the hallmark is discomfort or irritation at the lid margin. You may notice:

  • Red, itchy, or burning eyelids, especially at the lash line
  • Crusty debris or “dandruff-like” material on eyelashes (especially cylindrical dandruff in demodex cases)
  • Dry, sandy, or gritty sensation in the eyes
  • Foreign body feeling that worsens as the day goes on
  • Eyelid swelling or puffiness along the margin
  • Recurrent eye infections or chalazia (small bumps on the eyelid)
  • Watery eyes alternating with dryness
  • Photosensitivity or light sensitivity

Demodex blepharitis has a specific signature: intense itching at the lash line, cylindrical “sheaths” visibly clinging to lash bases, and symptoms that often persist despite standard warm compress and lid hygiene routines.

Clinical assessment

How We Diagnose Blepharitis

Standard dry eye workups often miss blepharitis entirely — or worse, label everything “dry eye” and stop there. UDEI’s diagnostic approach begins at the lid margin and works systematically to identify the underlying driver:

Slit-Lamp Lid Margin Examination

We inspect the eyelid margin, lash bases, and conjunctival surface under magnification to identify vascular injection, edema, debris, and the presence of cylindrical dandruff — the pathognomonic sign of demodex infestation. This is where anterior vs. posterior vs. demodex differentiation begins.

Lash Epilation for Mite Confirmation

If demodex is suspected (itching, cylindrical dandruff, typical morphology), we carefully epilate 1–2 lashes from each upper lid and examine them under the microscope. Live demodex mites or their debris clinches the diagnosis and guides treatment choice — particularly whether Xdemvy (the FDA-approved anti-parasitic) is indicated. This simple, in-office test is the clinical gold standard and reveals what generic “blepharitis” misses.

Meibography (When Indicated)

Posterior blepharitis often coexists with meibomian gland dysfunction. We use advanced meibography to visualise gland structure and assess the degree of dropout — critical because it determines whether conservative at-home care or in-office procedures are needed. This is the single biggest diagnostic differentiator between a standard dry eye workup and the assessment we do at UDEI.

Tear Film & Ocular Surface Assessment

Blepharitis frequently unmasks underlying aqueous deficiency or drives secondary evaporative dry eye. We measure Schirmer’s test, osmolarity, tear break-up time, and staining patterns to distinguish primary blepharitis from blepharitis-triggered dry eye — essential because treatment sequencing changes.

The clinical moat: Lash epilation diagnosis is rapid, office-based, and definitive. It separates demodex-driven cases (which need specific pharmacologic treatment) from biofilm-driven anterior blepharitis (which needs mechanical exfoliation) from gland obstruction (which needs expression or probing). Generic “blepharitis” gets generic treatment and fails. Specific diagnosis unlocks specific relief.

Targeted by subtype

Treatment Approach

UDEI’s treatment philosophy: sequenced, not stacked. We start with the gentlest effective intervention and escalate only when indicated. The specific sequence depends on whether you have anterior blepharitis, posterior dysfunction, or confirmed demodex infestation.

Eyelid Hygiene & Warm Compress

Foundation therapy for all forms. Warm moist compresses (10–15 minutes, twice daily) soften lid margin debris and promote meibomian gland secretion. We recommend specific compresses and cleansing techniques to avoid irritation.

First-line

ZoHx Lid-Margin Exfoliation

UDEI’s in-house mechanical exfoliation procedure for anterior blepharitis and biofilm removal. ZoHx and ZoHx Lite are available for different treatment intensities.

Procedural
Learn about ZoHx →

Xdemvy (Prescription Demodex Treatment)

FDA-approved prescription eye drop for Demodex blepharitis. Prescribed when lash epilation and microscopy confirm mite infestation.

Pharmacologic
Learn about Xdemvy →

Meibomian Gland Expression & Probing

For posterior blepharitis with obstructed or atrophic glands, therapeutic expression (manual clearance) or probing (opening scarred ducts) can restore gland function. Often paired with mechanical exfoliation for anterior disease. Results are graded by gland morphology on meibography.

Procedural

Anti-Inflammatory Drops & Ointments

Topical antibiotics (azithromycin, gentamicin) or low-dose topical corticosteroids (fluorometholone, dexamethasone) manage inflammation during the acute phase. Topical cyclosporine (Restasis) offers longer-term anti-inflammatory benefit when drops alone don’t resolve symptoms.

Supportive

Systemic Therapy (When Indicated)

Oral antibiotics (tetracyclines — doxycycline, minocycline — at sub-antimicrobial doses) have lipid-modulating and anti-inflammatory properties valuable for severe posterior blepharitis with rosacea overlap. Prescribed for 4–12 weeks with gradual taper.

Systemic

Key principle: Treatment sequencing is personalised based on diagnostic findings. Outcomes depend on disease severity, adherence to home care, and individual response to therapy.

Daily routine

Home Care & Prevention

Blepharitis requires daily attention. Even after professional treatment resolves symptoms, ongoing lid hygiene prevents recurrence:

Daily Warm Compress Routine

Apply a clean, warm (not hot) compress to closed eyelids for 10–15 minutes each morning and evening. Follow with gentle lid margin cleansing using a lint-free cloth or designated lid wipe. This melts and mobilizes meibomian secretions and reduces bacterial biofilm. Consistency matters — skipping days allows symptoms to rebound.

Eyelid Cleansers for Demodex

If demodex is confirmed or suspected, use lash cleansers containing tea tree oil (10% terpinen-4-ol), hypochlorous acid, or other antimicrobial agents designed for the lid margin. Over-the-counter options like Blephadex (sodium hypochlorite) and Ocusoft (tea tree oil) are available at U Shoppe — ask our clinical team which is best for your case.

Preservative-Free Tears

Blepharitis-related dryness often worsens with preserved eye drops. Use preservative-free artificial tears or saline rinses 4–6 times daily to flush lids and protect the ocular surface. Cold compresses can relieve acute itching in demodex cases.

Avoid Irritants

Steer clear of heavy eye makeup (particularly mascara and eyeliner near the lash line), harsh soaps, and contact lens overwear during active blepharitis. If you wear lenses, daily disposables are gentler than reusables during flares. After blepharitis resolves, gradual reintroduction of cosmetics is fine — but lash line application remains higher-risk.

Omega-3 & Anti-Inflammatory Diet

Emerging evidence links omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids to reduced lid inflammation and meibomian gland health. Consider fish oil supplementation (1–2 grams EPA+DHA daily) or dietary increase of fatty fish. Avoid excessive sugar and refined carbohydrates, which promote biofilm-forming bacteria.

Recurrence prevention: Blepharitis is chronic and rarely disappears completely. The goal is long-term control through consistent hygiene, early recognition of flare triggers (stress, dry indoor heat, contact lens overwear), and prompt in-office retreatment when symptoms return. UDEI patients who maintain daily lid care and attend annual checkups experience dramatically fewer recurrences and serious complications.

Common questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Blepharitis is chronic inflammation of the eyelid margin — the rim where your eyelashes grow. It can be caused by three primary mechanisms: anterior blepharitis (bacteria and biofilm on the skin surface and lash follicles), posterior blepharitis (obstruction or dysfunction of the meibomian glands under the lid), or demodex infestation (overgrowth of microscopic mites living in lash follicles). Often, multiple causes overlap. The inflammation develops because bacteria colonize the lid margin, oils accumulate and thicken, or mite populations explode unchecked — triggering redness, irritation, and frequently secondary dry eye.

Clinical signs include intense itching at the lash line (worse in the morning), cylindrical “dandruff” or sheaths clinging to lash bases, recurrent lid symptoms despite good hygiene, and a history of symptoms that don’t improve with standard warm compresses or eyelid scrubs. The only way to confirm is with lash epilation — a simple in-office procedure where we carefully pull 1–2 lashes from each upper lid and examine them under the microscope. Live mites or their debris confirms diagnosis and guides treatment choice. Many patients go years with undiagnosed demodex because standard eye exams don’t include this specific test.

Anterior blepharitis affects the skin surface and lash follicles. It’s usually bacterial or biofilm-driven and appears as redness, debris, and crusting at the lash line. Posterior blepharitis affects the meibomian glands underneath the lid. The glands become obstructed or dysfunctional, triggering secondary evaporative dry eye and a distinctive “thickened oil” appearance at the posterior lid margin. Posterior blepharitis often coexists with meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD) and requires meibography to assess gland health. Most patients have both anterior and posterior components. Treatment approaches differ based on the specific type and severity.

Diagnosis begins with slit-lamp examination of the lid margin — we look for cylindrical dandruff, vascular injection, and lash follicle morphology. If demodex is suspected, we perform lash epilation: carefully epilate 1–2 lashes from each upper lid and examine them under the microscope at 4x or 10x magnification. Demodex mites (typically 0.2–0.5mm) or their transparent, cylindrical debris are diagnostic. Mite count correlates with severity — 5+ mites per lash indicates high load and need for systemic therapy (Xdemvy). This test is painless, takes 2–3 minutes, and provides definitive diagnosis unavailable at general eye exams.

Xdemvy is an FDA-approved prescription eye drop for Demodex blepharitis. We prescribe it when lash epilation and microscopy confirm Demodex mites as the primary driver. Learn about Xdemvy →

ZoHx is UDEI’s in-house lid-margin exfoliation procedure for anterior blepharitis and biofilm buildup. ZoHx Lite is a lighter option for maintenance between fuller sessions. Learn about ZoHx →

Daily lash line hygiene is the foundation of all blepharitis management. Each morning and evening: apply a warm (not hot) compress to closed eyelids for 10–15 minutes to soften oils and crusting. Then gently clean the lash line with a designated eyelid cleanser using a lint-free cloth or disposable wipe. We recommend UDEI-approved cleansers available at U Shoppe: Blephadex (sodium hypochlorite for biofilm disruption), Ocusoft Plus (mild surfactant and tea tree oil for demodex suppression), or Xdemvy-compatible cleansers (non-irritating options for patients on Xdemvy). Never use facial soap, makeup remover, or harsh scrubbing — the lid margin skin is delicate. Consistency matters: skipping days allows biofilm and mites to recolonize, and symptoms rebound quickly.

Yes. Blepharitis and meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD) are tightly linked — posterior blepharitis IS gland dysfunction. Inflammation at the lid margin damages meibomian gland ducts, causing them to scar or clog. Over time, gland atrophy accelerates, and the quality and quantity of meibumian oil decline — triggering or worsening evaporative dry eye. Anterior blepharitis can also trigger secondary aqueous deficiency by damaging the main and accessory lacrimal glands. This is why blepharitis diagnosis requires meibography (to assess gland health) and tear film testing — to distinguish primary blepharitis from blepharitis-driven dry eye. The good news: early treatment of blepharitis arrests gland damage and, in some cases, reverses mild gland dropout. If you have blepharitis, ask us about your MGD status. Learn more at our MGD treatment page or our Aqueous Deficiency page.

OHIP covers standard ophthalmic examination and lash epilation diagnosis when performed by a physician. Advanced diagnostics and in-office procedures (ZoHx, meibomian expression/probing) are specialised services not covered. Xdemvy and other prescription drops vary by individual insurance coverage. UDEI provides itemised receipts for all services.

Refer to UDEI if: A patient presents with lid margin redness, itching, or crusting that persists despite 4+ weeks of home hygiene and warm compresses; suspected or confirmed demodex infestation; recurrent chalazia or hordeola; blepharitis-related dry eye that’s not responding to standard drops or gels; anterior or posterior blepharitis overlapping with meibomian gland dysfunction; or any case where lash epilation diagnosis would clarify next steps. Contact details: UDEI Referral Desk — Phone: 416-292-0334, Fax: 416-292-0331, Email: info@udei.ca. Referral form available at our Uptown Eye Specialists Professional Relations portal. We accept same-day or next-week urgent referrals for recurrent or refractory cases. Non-emergency cases typically book within 1–2 weeks.

Next Step

Get a Precise Diagnosis

Blepharitis doesn’t respond to guessing. If you have persistent lid symptoms, schedule a UDEI evaluation. Lash epilation, meibography, and tear film assessment take one appointment — and your diagnosis (and treatment pathway) come into focus.

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