What’s wrong with the white flesh in the corner of your eye?

White meat in the corner of the eye is clinically common as lacrimal caruncle, blepharophimosis, pterygium and so on.
1. Lacrimal caruncle: it is a normal structure of the eyeball, located in the inner corner of the eye, in the form of an ovoid bulge, and often exists symmetrically in both eyes.
2. Blepharospasm: In the early stage, it may appear as a white fleshy bulge of the bulbar conjunctiva near the corneal limbus. In the later stage, it may become yellowish brown, which is usually caused by collagen degeneration of the conjunctiva induced by ultraviolet rays.
3. Pterygium: the white flesh of the conjunctiva can be seen to grow towards the black eyeball, which is usually due to the prolonged exposure to ultraviolet rays or the stimulation of wind and sand outside, resulting in the abnormal proliferation of the conjunctiva.
It is recommended that the patient should consult a doctor in time for examination to clarify the nature of physiological manifestations or pathological phenomena.