When a child develops inverted eyelashes, they can be corrected by removal of the inverted eyelashes, electrolysis or surgical correction to improve the eye discomfort. Inverted eyelashes are a common ophthalmologic condition in which the patient’s eyelashes do not point straight ahead, but rather stab toward the eyeball. The eyelashes move with the rotation of the eyeball, abrading the cornea and triggering symptoms such as conjunctival congestion, eye pain, foreign body sensation, photophobia, and watering of the eyeball. If the symptoms are not severe and there are only a small number of implanted eyelashes, the implanted eyelashes can be removed directly. However, direct removal of the eyelashes is not a complete cure for impaction. To avoid recurrence, patients can undergo electrolysis to treat impaction, which destroys the eyelash follicles where the impaction grows and prevents it from recurring. If the eyelashes are heavily implanted due to entropion, the child will need to undergo surgery to correct the impaction. It is recommended that children with implanted eyelashes be seen in a hospital to have their condition evaluated and treated according to the doctor’s instructions.