Diagnostic Code 6018 · 38 CFR §4.79
Chronic conjunctivitis (nontrachomatous) is persistent or recurring inflammation of the conjunctiva, the clear membrane covering the white of the eye and inner eyelids. Veterans commonly develop chronic conjunctivitis from exposure to sand, dust, smoke, chemical fumes, or environmental irritants during deployment. Symptoms include red, burning, itchy eyes with discharge, tearing, and light sensitivity. While not typically vision-threatening, the constant irritation significantly affects comfort and quality of life. Under the CFR, active chronic conjunctivitis receives a minimum 10% rating evaluated under the General Rating Formula for Diseases of the Eye. When inactive, it is evaluated based on residuals such as visual impairment and disfigurement.
| Rating | Criteria |
|---|---|
| 10% | Minimum rating for active chronic conjunctivitis (nontrachomatous), evaluated under the General Rating Formula. This is the minimum compensable rating for active disease. |
| 0% | Inactive conjunctivitis with no active inflammation, evaluated based on residuals. If no residual visual impairment or disfigurement remains, a 0% rating applies. |
An ophthalmology examination confirming chronic conjunctivitis is essential. Documentation of ongoing symptoms and treatment over months or years, service records documenting exposure to irritants (sand, dust, smoke, chemicals), treatment records showing the chronic nature of the condition, and evidence that the condition has not resolved with standard treatment all strengthen your claim.
Yes. Prolonged exposure to sand, dust, and other particulate matter during deployment is a well-recognized cause of chronic conjunctivitis. Many veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan operations have developed persistent eye irritation from environmental exposure. Document your deployment conditions as part of your claim.
Under DC 6018, the minimum for active disease is 10%. If the condition has caused secondary problems like corneal damage or significant dry eye, those conditions can be rated separately under their own diagnostic codes, increasing overall compensation.