Can alcohol be used for wheals?

You should not use alcohol for wheals. If you have wheals, you will experience eye pain or localized skin redness and swelling. Alcohol is a strong irritant and if rubbed on a mydriasis will cause increased eye pain and may worsen the local edema of the eye. Macroglossia is a purulent inflammation of the lid gland and its accessory glands, and it is recommended that antibiotic eye drops and ointments be used locally in a standardized manner. The eye drops are ordered 4-5 times during the day and 1-2 times at night with eye ointment, followed by hot compresses to observe the development of the wheals. If it reaches the stage of ulceration, you can perform abscess scraping of the wheals, and then standardize the use of antibiotic eye drops and ointment. This way the wheals can be treated more regularly and healed more thoroughly. Alcohol wipes and iodophor wipes can only be used during local drug changes. It is recommended not to rub with alcohol in the early, initial or surgical stage of mydriasis, as it may cause aggravation of eye pain and eye redness.