If there are drops that dialate eyes why aren't there drops to undialate them?

To do a thorough examination of the eyes they dialate them with drops. After about 20 minutes the eyes are fully dialated. Then they send you out to endure several hours of poor vision and misery.

Why isn’t there an eyedrop that will reverse the process and get you back to normal, say within an hour?

There are drops which reverse dilation. One brand is Rev-Eyes.

Then why don’t the eye doctors administer them.

Some do.

I asked this very question and was told that, yes, they could undilate my eyes but that I wouldn’t like the side effects. I don’t remember what they all were but one of them was beet red eyes for a few days. I declined.

Just speculating, but imagine the likely results of an overdose… Eeek!

Night blindness, I would guess

I work in an ophthalmology department, and we don’t administer any undilating drops. When the topic came up, one physician said that the kind he was familiar with only decreased the dilation time by an average of 20 minutes, and that’s pretty tiny compared with how long some people stay dilated. Me, I tend to have noticeably large pupils for 6 or more hours after dilation.

Checking the side effects, I would also assume that they’re not terribly acceptable risks considering that you can just undilate naturally.

Huh. I’d been lead to believe that there wasn’t an ‘antidote’ because the drops worked more or less topically, so unless you washed out your eyes, you just had to wait.

Granted, the ophthalmologist who told me that was less than truthful about any number of things, so…learn something new every day.

good ol’fashioned heroin would do the trick.

cite

There are drops to make the pupil smaller (miosis) and drops to make it larger(mydriasis). They do not work in tandem as if one were an effector and the other a reverser, as it were.

I have no idea what the net effect of atropine (dilation) and pilocarpine (constriction) would be, as examples. We are usually going for one effect or the other. While different types of drops have different mechanisms and different durations, we usually just let the effect wear off.

Side question for the med experts in the thread: How does one pronounce Cyclomydril? My baby had a life-threatening vagal reaction to it twice (tachy and then brachycardia with apnea), and I’ve forgotten how to say it so doctors don’t give it to her again.

sigh-CLA-mah-drill? sigh-clowe-MY-drill? Something like that? I have it written down just in case and it’s in huge warning letters all over her chart and the folder it comes in at her current eye doctors, but the last time I said it aloud I got funny looks and I’d rather get it right.

And is it ever used for anything other than dilating pupils?

Just put sand in them. Make sure they are the Sands of Time, though - other types of sand may irritate your eyes.