Source
NIH MedlinePlus — Swelling
Quick Summary
MedlinePlus medical encyclopedia page defining swelling as fluid buildup in tissues and listing salt, systemic causes, and clinician follow-up for unexplained swelling.
| Source type | medical_reference |
|---|
What Studied
This Source page records the evidence item used by the puffy-eyes page. Institutional references summarize patient-facing guidance on under-eye puffiness, bags, swelling, allergies, or self-care. The official product page source is used only for product facts.
Main Findings
The page uses this source conservatively: morning puffiness is framed as usually fluid-related appearance change; under-eye bags may also include structural tissue changes; cold compresses, sleep posture, sodium awareness, allergy management, and gentle eye-area care are reasonable first-line appearance strategies; product claims remain factual and bounded.
Why It Matters
This source helps separate transient cosmetic puffiness from persistent, painful, asymmetric, or medically concerning swelling. It also keeps product and ingredient mentions grounded in appropriate references rather than relying on brand copy for efficacy claims.
Original Source
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- Source
- NIH MedlinePlus — Swelling
- Quick Summary
- MedlinePlus medical encyclopedia page defining swelling as fluid buildup in tissues and listing salt, systemic causes, and clinician follow-up for unexplained swelling.
- What Studied
- This Source page records the evidence item used by the puffy-eyes page. Institutional references summarize patient-facing guidance on under-eye puffiness, bags, swelling, allergies, or self-care. The official product page source is used only for product facts.
- Main Findings
- The page uses this source conservatively: morning puffiness is framed as usually fluid-related appearance change; under-eye bags may also include structural tissue changes; cold compresses, sleep posture, sodium awareness, allergy management, and gentle eye-area care are reasonable first-line appearance strategies; product claims remain factual and bounded.
- Why It Matters
- This source helps separate transient cosmetic puffiness from persistent, painful, asymmetric, or medically concerning swelling. It also keeps product and ingredient mentions grounded in appropriate references rather than relying on brand copy for efficacy claims.
- Original Source
- NIH MedlinePlus. "Swelling."
- Supports
- question_what-causes-puffy-eyes-in-the-morning, concern_periorbital-puffiness, concern_under-eye-bags