What should I do if my eye is red from a poke? If the eye is accidentally poked, it is usually visible as a reddened, hemorrhagic patch under the white eye. Patients are usually very nervous when they see this, and most recover naturally if they only see the hemorrhagic patch, with no change in vision and no discharge or tearing pain in the eye. Examination reveals a spotty patch of hemorrhagic squamous spots under the bulbar conjunctiva. In fresh hemorrhage, the color is bright red and the border is clear. Late hemorrhages, which darken or turn brownish-yellow in color, usually do not require special treatment and can be completely absorbed in 1-2 weeks without leaving any trace. If the white eye is poked and injured at the same time as the black eye, which means the cornea, the patient will have a foreign body sensation of tearing and needs to go to the ophthalmology department for further examination and be given anti-inflammatory drugs to nourish the corneal epithelium.