<p>THURSDAY, May 31 (HealthDay News) — Teens who take a acne
medication ordinarily famous as Accutane (<span>isotretinoin</span>) seem to face twice
the risk of <span>eye infections</span>, including <span>conjunctivitis</span> (pink eye) and styes,
a new investigate says.</p>
<p>Researchers in Israel collected information on scarcely 15,000 teenagers and young
adults holding isotretinoin to provide acne and compared their rates of eye
infections to an age- and gender-matched organisation that had acne though was not
taking a drugs and to a third organisation that didn’t take a drugs and
didn’t have acne. Isotretinoin is also sole underneath a code names
Roaccutane, Amnesteem, Claravis, Myorisan and Sotret.</p>
<p>Within a year of starting a <span>medication</span>, scarcely 14 percent of those in
the acne remedy organisation grown an <span>eye infection</span> or <span>dry eyes</span>...
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