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Molluscum Contagiosum of the Eyelid

A viral skin infection causing small umbilicated eyelid papules — significant because a lid-margin lesion sheds virus onto the eye and drives a chronic follicular conjunctivitis that clears only when the lesion is removed.

Medically reviewed by EyePlastics Medical Editorial BoardASOPRS oculoplastic surgeonsLast updated June 2026

Molluscum Contagiosum of the Eyelid

Molluscum contagiosum is a common viral skin infection that, on the eyelids, shows up as small, flesh-colored, dome-shaped bumps with a tiny dimple in the center. It is caused by a poxvirus (the molluscum contagiosum virus) and spreads by skin-to-skin contact. On the eyelid it matters for a reason beyond appearance: a lesion at the lid margin can shed viral particles onto the eye and cause a stubborn, chronic conjunctivitis.

This is a focused companion to our Eyelid Skin Lesions & Tumors guide and our Eyelid & Orbital Infections guide.

Periocular and eyelid molluscum contagiosum — small umbilicated papules
Eyelid molluscum contagiosum — dome-shaped papules with a central dimple (umbilication).

What It Looks Like

Eyelid molluscum lesions are typically:

  • Small (about 2–5 mm), flesh-colored or pearly, dome-shaped papules
  • Marked by a characteristic central dimple or pit (called umbilication)
  • Single or multiple, sometimes clustered along the lid margin

The condition is most common in children, in people with a weakened immune system, and in adults who acquire it through close skin contact. In an otherwise healthy person the lesions are harmless to the skin itself — but their location on the eyelid is what makes them worth treating.

Why an Eyelid Lesion Is Different

A molluscum bump sitting at or near the lid margin can shed virus particles onto the surface of the eye. This triggers a chronic follicular conjunctivitis — a persistent red, irritated eye that is frequently misdiagnosed and treated as allergic or ordinary viral conjunctivitis. The tell-tale clue: the conjunctivitis will not fully clear until the molluscum lesion producing it is removed. Any patient with a one-sided, treatment-resistant conjunctivitis should have their lid margins examined closely for a molluscum papule.

Treatment

Because the eye-surface irritation resolves only when the source lesion is gone, treatment is directed at removing or destroying the papules, especially those at the lid margin:

  • Excision or incision and curettage — removing the core of the lesion; definitive for a margin lesion driving conjunctivitis
  • Cryotherapy — freezing superficial lesions, used more cautiously near the lid margin because of the risk of pigment loss
  • Observation — in a healthy person, molluscum can eventually clear on its own, but lid-margin lesions causing eye irritation are usually treated rather than watched

Numerous or recurrent lesions — particularly in someone with a compromised immune system — may point to an underlying condition that also needs attention.

When to See a Specialist

See an eye specialist for an eyelid bump paired with a red, watery eye that has not responded to drops, or for lesions right at the lash line. Removing them near the delicate lid margin — without damaging the eyelashes or the lid — is precisely the kind of work an oculoplastic surgeon does. An ASOPRS-trained oculoplastic surgeon can clear the lesions and resolve the associated conjunctivitis.

An eyelid bump with a stubborn red eye?

Molluscum at the lid margin often drives a conjunctivitis that only clears once the lesion is removed. Find a specialist near you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why won't my red eye clear up with drops?
If an eyelid molluscum lesion at the lid margin is shedding virus onto the eye, it drives a follicular conjunctivitis that will not resolve until the lesion itself is removed. A persistent one-sided red eye should prompt a close look at the lid margins.
Can eyelid molluscum go away on its own?
In a healthy person molluscum can eventually clear spontaneously, but lid-margin lesions causing eye irritation are usually removed rather than watched, because the associated conjunctivitis persists while the lesion remains.
Is it contagious?
Yes — it spreads by skin-to-skin contact, which is why it is common in children and can appear in multiples. Numerous or recurrent lesions can also signal a weakened immune system.

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