There are two main types of dry eye: evaporative and aqueous-deficient. Knowing the difference is important for identifying the specific cause of your symptoms. The right diagnosis helps guide treatment and improves long-term comfort.
To understand the types of dry eye and their treatments, let’s start with the tear film.
Your eyes remain comfortable because a thin layer of tears covers the surface. This is called the tear film, and it has three parts that work together.
When all three layers are balanced, your eyes stay hydrated and clear. But when one part is not working correctly, problems begin.
Understanding which layer is affected helps explain why your symptoms feel the way they do and why treatment needs to match the source of the problem.
Evaporative dry eye occurs when tears evaporate too quickly. Even if your eyes produce enough tears, they do not stay on the surface long enough to keep your eyes comfortable.
This type of dry eye is most often linked to Meibomian gland dysfunction, which affects the function of your tear film.
Your eyelids contain small oil glands called Meibomian glands. These glands release oil that forms the outer layer of your tear film.
When these glands become blocked or do not work properly, the oil layer becomes thin or uneven. Without enough oil, your tears evaporate faster than they should.
This is why Meibomian gland dysfunction is the leading cause of evaporative dry eye. It changes how long your tears can protect the surface of your eyes.
Evaporative dry eye often feels worse as the day goes on, especially during activities that reduce blinking.
You may notice:
Common causes include:
These factors often build over time, which is why symptoms start gradually and become more noticeable later on.
Aqueous-deficient dry eye occurs when your eyes do not produce enough of the watery part of your tears.
Unlike evaporative dry eye (where tears disappear too quickly), this type starts with a lack of tear production. Your eyes simply do not have enough moisture to stay comfortable.
Your tears are produced by the lacrimal glands, which sit above each eye. These glands create the water layer of your tear film.
When they do not produce enough fluid, your eyes cannot maintain proper hydration. This leads to dryness that does not improve on its own.
Aqueous deficiency often feels steady and ongoing, rather than changing throughout the day.
You may notice:
Because the issue is a lack of tear volume, blinking does not provide the same relief it might with other types of dry eye.
Common causes include:
Understanding the cause of aqueous deficiency helps guide treatment. The goal is not just to add moisture, but to support tear production and protect the eye over time.
Yes, many people have more than one type of dry eye at the same time. This is often called mixed dry eye.
In these cases, the tear film has more than one issue. The oil layer may be unstable, while tear production is also reduced. When both problems are present, symptoms can overlap and feel harder to interpret.
You might notice:
Because symptoms can blend together, it is not always clear what the underlying cause is. What feels like a single problem may actually involve multiple components of the tear film.
This is why self-diagnosis is often unreliable. Treating only one aspect of dry eye does not address the full picture, leading to ongoing discomfort.
A proper evaluation helps identify all contributing factors so treatment is more targeted and effective. Dry eye may seem simple, but diagnosing it correctly requires a closer look at how your tear film functions.
During an eye exam, your provider evaluates several key areas:
These details help identify the type of dry eye you have, and treatment is then matched to the underlying cause.
When treatment is based on the correct diagnosis, it targets the source of the problem rather than just the symptoms. This leads to more consistent, long-term relief instead of short-term fixes that need to be repeated.
Dry eye symptoms can come and go, but some signs suggest the need for a closer evaluation. You should consider seeing an eye doctor if you notice:
If your symptoms are not improving, a proper diagnosis will help you move toward lasting relief rather than temporary fixes.
At Heart of Texas Eye Care, dry eye evaluations focus on identifying the specific cause of your symptoms so your care is tailored to what your eyes actually need. Call us at (512) 213-2220 or schedule your eye exam today!
We serve patients in Dripping Springs, Austin, Kyle, Bee Cave, Marble Falls, and other surrounding areas.