Conditions / Chalazion
Condition
Understanding Chalazion
A painless lump in your eyelid is almost always a blocked oil gland — not an infection. If yours keeps coming back, the lump isn’t the real problem. The gland environment is. We treat both, so you’re not draining the same lump twice.
chalazion in their lifetime
meibomian gland disease
proper conservative care
isn’t addressed
About this condition
What is a Chalazion?
A chalazion is a firm, usually painless lump in your eyelid caused by a blocked meibomian gland — one of the tiny oil glands that line the edge of your upper and lower lids. When a gland becomes obstructed, the oil it would normally release has nowhere to go. It builds up under the skin and your body walls it off into a localised, sterile lump.
Unlike a stye, a chalazion isn’t an infection. It’s a mechanical problem — trapped oil, not bacteria — which is why antibiotic drops don’t resolve it and squeezing it doesn’t help. Most chalazia develop gradually over days to weeks, feel firm rather than tender, and sit mid-lid rather than at the lash line.
Chalazia are common and, in isolation, usually not dangerous. But they rarely appear out of nowhere. In the majority of cases, they’re a visible sign of something quieter going on beneath the surface — meibomian gland dysfunction, blepharitis, or lid margin inflammation — which is why they often come back if the underlying gland environment isn’t treated.
Why this matters
The lump is a symptom, not the disease. Most general practices treat the chalazion itself — warm compresses, and surgery if it doesn’t go away. At UDEI, we also assess and treat the upstream gland dysfunction driving it. That’s why our patients see fewer recurrences and, in many cases, avoid surgery altogether.
Commonly confused
Chalazion vs. Stye
Most people use “stye” as a catch-all term for any bump on the eyelid. Clinically, they’re two different things — and the distinction changes how we treat them.
Chalazion
- CauseBlocked meibomian (oil) gland — sterile
- PainUsually painless or only mildly tender
- OnsetGradual, over days to weeks
- LocationMid-lid, further from the lash line
- FeelFirm, rubbery, well-defined lump
- RednessMinimal — skin usually looks normal
- TreatmentWarm compresses, address underlying MGD, sometimes steroid injection or surgical drainage
Stye (Hordeolum)
- CauseBacterial infection of a gland or lash follicle
- PainTender, often painful to touch
- OnsetRapid, over 1–3 days
- LocationAt the lash line (external) or under the lid (internal)
- FeelSoft, swollen, sometimes with a visible white head
- RednessWarm, red, and visibly inflamed
- TreatmentWarm compresses, lid hygiene, sometimes antibiotics if infection spreads
The two conditions can evolve into one another. A stye that doesn’t fully resolve can leave behind a chalazion; a chalazion can become secondarily infected and look like a stye. A proper examination sorts it out — and changes what we recommend next.
Why it happens
Causes & Risk Factors
Chalazia are almost always a downstream consequence of lid-margin disease. The meibomian gland doesn’t block in isolation — something is usually making its contents thicker, the lid margin more inflamed, or the gland opening narrower. Identifying those upstream factors is the difference between treating a single episode and preventing the next one.
- Meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD) — the most common underlying cause; thickened, stagnant meibum blocks the gland from the inside
- Chronic blepharitis or Demodex mite infestation — inflammation and biofilm at the lash line narrow and inflame gland openings
- Rosacea — both facial and ocular rosacea dramatically increase chalazion risk
- Incomplete lid hygiene or residual eye makeup — especially waterline liner, which sits directly over gland openings
- Hormonal changes — pregnancy, menopause, and androgen shifts alter meibum composition
- Contact lens wear without consistent lid hygiene
- A previous chalazion — recurrence is common when the underlying gland disease isn’t addressed
If you recognise several of these, you’re not unlucky — you’re describing the typical chalazion patient. The encouraging part: every one of these factors is modifiable.
What you may notice
Symptoms You May Recognise
A typical chalazion develops gradually and is more of a nuisance than a medical emergency. Common signs include:
- A firm, painless lump in the upper or lower eyelid
- Mild swelling that developed gradually over days to weeks — not overnight
- A feeling of heaviness or pressure in the affected lid
- Blurred vision if the lump is large enough to press on the surface of the eye
- Watering on the affected side
- Skin over the lump looks roughly normal — not hot, red, or angry
- Sometimes occasional tenderness, but not the sharp, warm pain of a stye
If your lump is painful, red, hot, rapidly spreading, or if you have fever or vision loss, that’s not a typical chalazion — please contact us or your optometrist urgently so we can rule out an infection or cellulitis.
Treatment options
How We Treat Chalazia
We work layered and conservative first. Most chalazia don’t need surgery — they need the gland environment treated properly. When a procedure is required, we coordinate with our oculoplastic colleagues at Uptown Eye Specialists and follow up afterwards to keep it from coming back.
Warm Compresses & Lid Hygiene
Moist heat softens blocked meibum and supports natural drainage. A proven foundation for home care, especially for early or small chalazia. We’ll guide you on proper technique and consistency at your visit.
First-lineUltraView DEL™ (Medical IPL)
Our in-clinic intense pulsed light therapy works on three fronts: controlled light energy warms the meibomian glands and liquefies blocked oils, pulsed light calms inflammation at the lid margin, and it reduces Demodex mites and bacteria that feed the cycle. Most acute chalazia respond within a few sessions; recurrent cases typically benefit from two to three treatments spaced weeks apart.
Recurrent / chronicMeibomian Gland Expression
In-clinic mechanical clearing of blocked glands restores gland function. Frequently paired with thermal therapy or IPL for comprehensive gland-environment treatment.
Active chalazionZoHx Lid Debridement
Professional lid debridement removes biofilm and debris from the lash line. Essential when blepharitis is contributing to the inflammatory cycle.
Underlying blepharitis Learn about ZoHx →Referral for Steroid Injection or Surgical Excision
For persistent, large, or vision-affecting chalazia, we coordinate an in-office triamcinolone injection or surgical drainage with the oculoplastic team at Uptown Eye Specialists — then handle the medical follow-up to prevent recurrence.
Procedure referralHome-Care Protocol
Omega-3 supplementation, a quality heated eye mask, and lid-care products matched to your skin and gland profile. We design a realistic daily routine you can actually stick to — because consistency is what prevents the next one.
OngoingMost patients benefit from a combination of approaches rather than any single one. We’ll start conservative, measure what’s working, and escalate only if we need to.
Break the cycle
Why Chalazia Come Back — and How to Stop Them
If you’ve had two or three chalazia, the problem isn’t bad luck. It’s that the gland environment that produced the first one is still producing the conditions for the next. Draining the lump — whether by warm compress, injection, or surgery — treats the consequence, not the cause.
A proper recurrence-prevention plan addresses the whole lid margin, not just the visible lump. That typically means:
Assess and treat underlying MGD and blepharitis
Meibomian gland imaging and lid-margin evaluation tell us which glands are dysfunctional and whether blepharitis or Demodex is fuelling the inflammation. Treatment targets what we find.
Establish a realistic daily lid-care routine
Warm compresses done properly, lid hygiene that reaches the gland openings, and make-up habits that don’t clog the waterline. Small, sustainable changes — not a punishing regimen.
Manage rosacea and systemic contributors
If ocular rosacea is driving recurrence, treating the rosacea changes everything. We coordinate with your family physician or dermatologist where appropriate.
Consider periodic UltraView DEL™ maintenance
For patients with a clear history of recurrence, scheduled IPL sessions keep inflammation low and gland function stable — often the difference between one chalazion a year and none at all.
Discuss low-dose oral antibiotics when appropriate
For recurrent chalazion with underlying blepharitis or ocular rosacea, a short course of low-dose doxycycline (typically 50–100 mg daily for three to six months) can change the chemistry of meibomian secretions and reduce recurrence. It’s an evidence-supported option worth discussing with your UDEI clinician — not a default, but a useful tool when the pattern calls for it.
Recurrent chalazia deserve a proper workup
If you’ve had three or more chalazia — or one that keeps coming back in the same spot — please don’t ignore it. In the large majority of cases, it’s MGD or blepharitis that needs proper treatment. But a chalazion that recurs in the exact same location, has an unusual appearance, or is accompanied by loss of eyelashes in that area occasionally needs a biopsy to rule out a rare condition. That’s not to alarm you — it’s why we take recurrent same-site chalazia seriously rather than just draining them again.
Connected care
Chalazion Care Across the UVG Network
Most chalazia can be treated medically — but when a procedure or second opinion is the right call, you’re already inside a connected network. No cold referrals. No starting over.
Need a procedure? Persistent, large, or vision-affecting chalazia are referred to the oculoplastic team at Uptown Eye Specialists for triamcinolone injection or in-office surgical excision. We handle the medical side; they handle the procedure; we close the loop with follow-up and recurrence prevention.
Contributing lid changes? If eyelid laxity, malposition, or entropion is contributing to recurrence, the oculoplastic specialists at Uptown Eye Specialists can assess whether the lid architecture itself needs attention.
Cosmetic eyelid rejuvenation? For patients interested in addressing eyelid changes beyond function — droopy lids, fine lines, festoons — U Eye Laser Cosmetic offers non-surgical lid and periocular treatments.
Home-care products? The heated masks, omega-3 supplements, and lid-hygiene products we recommend are curated for dry eye and chalazion patients and available through U Shoppe — so you don’t have to guess which drugstore option is the right one.
Common questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Take the next step
Ready to stop the cycle?
A comprehensive assessment at UDEI maps the gland environment that’s producing your chalazia — and gives you a plan that treats the cause, not just the lump. Est. 2006, UDEI has helped patients find lasting relief from dry eye and lid-margin disease across the Greater Toronto Area.
