Tears are the clear, saline fluid secreted by the lacrimal glands and accessory glands in the eyes, forming a thin tear film that coats the ocular surface to maintain hydration, protect against environmental threats, and facilitate clear vision.[1] This film consists of three distinct layers: an inner mucin layer produced by conjunctival goblet cells for adhesion; a middle aqueous layer rich in water, electrolytes, proteins (such as lysozyme and lactoferrin for antimicrobial activity), and metabolites; and an outer lipid layer from meibomian glands that prevents evaporation and stabilizes the film.[2] With a typical volume of 3-10 μL and a thickness of about 3 μm, tears are continuously produced at a rate of 1-2 μL per minute and spread across the cornea with each blink before draining via the nasolacrimal ducts.[2]Human tears are classified into three main types based on their production triggers and composition. Basal tears, secreted continuously, provide baseline lubrication, remove debris, deliver nutrients and oxygen to the avascular cornea, and offer innate immune defense through antimicrobial proteins like secretory IgA, lysozyme (at concentrations up to 2.5 mg/mL), and lactoferrin (1.5 mg/mL).[2][3] Reflex tears are elicited by irritants such as smoke, onions, or foreign bodies via the trigeminal-parasympathetic reflex, producing a higher volume to flush the ocular surface and neutralize threats.[2] Emotional tears, unique to humans and emerging in infants around 4-8 weeks of age, arise from strong affective states like sorrow, joy, or empathy, involving activation of the central autonomic network including the amygdala, hypothalamus, and periaqueductal gray; these tears differ biochemically, potentially containing higher levels of stress hormones like adrenocorticotropic hormone.[4]Beyond ocular maintenance, tears play critical roles in broader physiology and social behavior. The tear film contributes approximately 80% of the eye's refractive power for optical clarity, promotes wound healing via growth factors such as epidermal growth factor and transforming growth factor-β, and suppresses inflammation with factors like IL-1 receptor antagonist.[3] Emotional crying, occurring on average 0-5 times per month in adults (more frequently in women), signals distress to elicit empathy and support, enhances social bonding through pro-social responses, and may aid emotional regulation by releasing endorphins and oxytocin while reducing sympathetic nervous system arousal.[4] Disruptions in tear production or quality, as seen in dry eye disease, can lead to discomfort, blurred vision, and increased infection risk, underscoring tears' essential protective functions.[1]
Anatomy and Physiology
Tear Production Glands
The main lacrimal glands are paired exocrine structures responsible for the primary production of the aqueous component of tears. They are located in the superolateral aspect of the orbit, within the lacrimal fossa of the frontal bone, and are divided into a larger orbital lobe and a smaller palpebral lobe by the aponeurosis of the levator palpebrae superioris muscle.[5][6] These glands secrete a serous, watery fluid that is isotonic to plasma, primarily through acinar cells that form the bulk of the glandular parenchyma.[5][6]Accessory lacrimal glands, including the glands of Krause and Wolfring, supplement the main glands by providing continuous basal tear secretion. The glands of Krause, numbering about 20-40, are situated in the superior and inferior conjunctival fornices, while the glands of Wolfring are fewer and embedded along the superior tarsal plate near its nonmarginal border.[7][6] These accessory structures contribute approximately 10% of the total lacrimal secretory output and secrete a watery, protein-rich fluid similar to that of the main glands.[6]Meibomian glands, also known as tarsal glands, are holocrine sebaceous glands embedded within the tarsal plates of the upper and lower eyelids, with 20-40 glands in the upper lid and 20-30 in the lower. They secrete a lipid-rich substance called meibum, which forms the outermost oily layer of the tear film to prevent evaporation.[8][9]Goblet cells are specialized unicellular glands dispersed throughout the non-keratinized stratified squamous epithelium of the conjunctiva, particularly concentrated in the fornices. These cells produce and secrete gel-forming mucins, such as MUC5AC, that constitute the innermost mucin layer of the tear film, aiding in its stability and adhesion to the ocular surface.[10][7]The histological structure of the lacrimal glands features acinar units surrounded by myoepithelial cells, which contract to facilitate the expulsion of secretions into an interconnected ductal system. The main lacrimal glands possess 8-12 major excretory ducts that pierce the palpebral lobe and open into the superior conjunctival fornix, approximately 5 mm above the lateral tarsus.[5][6] Myoepithelial cells, contractile in nature, envelop the acini and support the active transport of fluid from secretory cells to the ducts.[6]Innervation of the tear production glands primarily involves parasympathetic fibers from the facial nerve (cranial nerve VII), which stimulate aqueous secretion from the main and accessory lacrimal glands via the greater petrosal nerve and pterygopalatine ganglion.[11] Sympathetic and sensory inputs from the trigeminal nerve (via the lacrimal nerve) also modulate glandular activity, though parasympathetic stimulation is the dominant driver for tear production.[5][11]Together, these glands produce the basal and reflex types of tears that assemble into the multilayered tear film.[6]
Human tears consist primarily of water, which accounts for approximately 98% of their volume and serves to hydrate the ocular surface.[2]The electrolyte profile of tears includes sodium, potassium, and chloride ions at concentrations similar to those in blood plasma, with typical values around 131 mM for sodium, 21 mM for potassium, and 123 mM for chloride, contributing to osmotic balance.[12]Proteins represent a key component of tears, comprising about 6-11 mg/mL in total concentration. Lysozyme, an antimicrobialenzyme secreted by the lacrimal glands, constitutes 20-30% of the total tear proteins and functions by hydrolyzing bacterial cell walls.[13] Other prominent proteins include lactoferrin, which sequesters iron to inhibit microbial growth; immunoglobulins such as secretory IgA, which provide adaptive immunity by neutralizing pathogens; and lipocalin, which facilitates the transport of lipids and exhibits siderophore-binding antimicrobial activity.[2][13]Lipids in tears, primarily derived from the meibomian glands, form a thin outer layer and include cholesterol, wax esters, and other nonpolar molecules that prevent evaporation. A 2023 study by Yazdani proposed that the tear film lipid layer may also play a role in facilitating corneal oxygenation by allowing diffusion of atmospheric oxygen to the avascular cornea.[14]Mucins, particularly MUC5AC produced by conjunctival goblet cells, contribute to the mucin layer of tears, creating a gel-like structure that enhances adhesion to the ocular surface.[15]Additional components in tears encompass glucose, urea, and various vitamins, such as vitamin D, which are present in trace amounts and reflect systemic levels.[2][16] The biochemical composition varies by tear type: basal tears maintain steady hydration with balanced electrolytes and proteins, reflex tears are enriched in antimicrobial factors like lysozyme, and emotional tears exhibit higher overall protein concentrations, potentially including stress-related hormones.[17]Tears maintain a neutral pH of approximately 7.4, ranging from 7.14 to 7.82, which supports the antimicrobial properties of components like lysozyme and lactoferrin by optimizing their enzymatic activity.[2]
Tear Film Layers and Drainage
The tear film covering the ocular surface consists of three distinct layers that together maintain ocular health by providing hydration, lubrication, and protection against environmental stressors. The innermost mucin layer, secreted primarily by goblet cells in the conjunctiva and epithelial cells on the cornea and conjunctiva, forms a thin gel-like foundation with a thickness of up to 0.5 μm; it facilitates adhesion of the tear film to the corneal epithelium and stabilizes the overlying layers by reducing surface tension and promoting even spreading.[18] The middle aqueous layer, the bulk of the tear film at approximately 3–5 μm thick, is composed of water, electrolytes, proteins, and metabolites derived from the lacrimal glands; it delivers essential nutrients and oxygen to the avascular cornea while flushing away debris and pathogens.[18] Outermost is the lipid layer, produced by the meibomian glands of the eyelids, which measures 15–157 nm (mean ~42 nm) in thickness and acts as a barrier to prevent excessive evaporation of the aqueous components, thereby preserving tear volume and film integrity.[18][2]The stability of the tear film is crucial for preventing dry spots on the ocular surface, which can lead to discomfort and epithelial damage if the film breaks prematurely. In healthy eyes, the non-invasive tear breakup time (NIBUT) typically ranges from 4 to 19 seconds, allowing the film to remain intact between blinks.[18] Blinking plays a pivotal role in renewing and redistributing the tear film, occurring at an average interval of 5–10 seconds during normal activities; each blink spreads the lipid layer across the aqueous surface at speeds up to 10 mm/s, reforms the mucin-aqueous interface, and mechanically removes debris while stimulating minor tear secretion to counteract thinning.[18] Instability arises when factors disrupt layer interactions, such as inadequate lipid coverage, resulting in accelerated breakup and localized dry areas that compromise the film's protective function.[18]Excess tears are drained from the ocular surface to prevent overflow and maintain balance, primarily through the lacrimal drainage system. Tears collect in the tear meniscus along the eyelid margins and enter the lacrimal puncta—small openings located at the medial canthi of the upper and lower eyelids—before flowing into the canaliculi, which are short ducts that converge at the lacrimal sac.[19] From the lacrimal sac, tears pass through the nasolacrimal duct into the inferior nasal meatus of the nasal cavity, where they are either reabsorbed by the mucosa or evaporate further; this passive and blink-assisted process handles the majority of tear removal, with approximately 90% of volume reabsorbed nasally.[19] For basal tears, the production and drainage flow rate is about 1 μL per minute per eye, ensuring steady-state hydration.[2]Evaporation accounts for 20–40% of total tear loss in normal conditions, varying with humidity and temperature, while the remainder is managed via drainage.[20]
Types of Tears
Tears are classified into three primary types based on the stimuli that trigger their production and their distinct physiological roles: basal, reflex, and emotional (also known as psychic) tears.[2] These categories differ in secretion rates, chemical compositions, and functions, with basal tears maintaining ongoing ocular health, reflex tears providing rapid defense against irritants, and emotional tears responding to psychological states.[17]Basal tears are continuously secreted at a low volume to lubricate the ocular surface, supply nutrients to the avascular cornea and conjunctiva, and offer baseline protection against environmental debris and microbes. Their production rate typically ranges from 1 to 2 μL per minute, resulting in a total daily output of approximately 0.9 to 2.9 mL, which is evenly distributed across the eye via blinking and drained through the nasolacrimal system.[2] Compositionally, basal tears feature the highest concentrations of proteins and lipids among tear types, including lactoferrin for iron-binding antimicrobial activity, lipocalin-1 for lipid transport, and lysozyme for bacterial lysis, ensuring stable tear film integrity.[2]Reflex tears are elicited by physical or chemical irritants, such as smoke, onions, or foreign bodies, activating sensory nerves to flush the ocular surface and dilute potential threats. This response is mediated primarily through the trigeminal nerve (cranial nerve V), which signals the lacrimal gland to increase secretion dramatically, often up to 100-fold over basal levels, reaching rates of approximately 100 to 300 μL per minute.[21] Reflex tears are enriched with antimicrobial proteins, including higher levels of lysozyme, defensins, and immunoglobulins like secretory IgA, compared to basal tears, to enhance pathogen clearance during acute exposure.[17] Their osmolarity remains comparable to basal tears, typically around 300 to 310 mOsm/L, indicating no significant hypertonicity despite rapid production.[22]Emotional tears arise in response to intense psychological stimuli, such as grief, joy, or empathy, and are considered unique to humans among primates, distinguishing them from other vertebrates that lack this affective lacrimation.[23] Production rates can mirror reflex tears, escalating to 100 to 300 μL per minute during episodes, though sustained crying may yield higher cumulative volumes over time.[24] Unlike basal or reflex tears, emotional tears exhibit elevated protein content—up to several times higher—along with stress-related hormones such as prolactin and leucine enkephalin, potentially aiding in emotional regulation by excreting these compounds.[17][25] This compositional variance contributes to their greater viscosity and slower evaporation compared to other tear types.[17]
Nictitating Membrane
The nictitating membrane, also known as the third eyelid, is a transparent or translucent conjunctival fold located at the medial canthus of the eye in many vertebrates. It consists of a thin, fibrous stroma lined by stratified squamous epithelium on both its external (conjunctival) and internal (bulbar) surfaces, often supported by a T-shaped cartilage plate that facilitates its movement. This structure is prominently featured in birds, reptiles, and numerous mammals, including cats, dogs, and camels, where it folds into a pocket when not in use.[26][27]In these animals, the nictitating membrane primarily functions to sweep horizontally across the cornea during blinking, driven by the retractor bulbi oculi muscle and associated pyramidalis muscle, which evenly distributes the tear film over the ocular surface for lubrication and clearance of debris. This action protects the eye from environmental hazards such as dust, wind, or projectiles while maintaining clear vision, as the membrane's translucency allows lighttransmission. Additionally, glands within the membrane, including lacrimal and Harderian glands, contribute to tear production, enhancing the precorneal tear film's immunologic and antimicrobial properties. In sharks and birds, the membrane can fully cover the eye, providing robust protection during predatory strikes or high-velocity flight and aiding tear distribution in aqueous or arid environments.[27][26]In humans, the equivalent structure is the vestigial plica semilunaris, a small, crescent-shaped fold of conjunctiva at the medial canthus that represents a remnant of the fully developed nictitating membrane seen in other vertebrates. Unlike its functional counterpart, the plica semilunaris does not actively sweep across the eye or significantly contribute to tear distribution, relying instead on the upper and lower eyelids for these roles; it may provide minor passive lubrication but lacks associated musculature for movement. This reduced form highlights evolutionary divergence in primate ocular anatomy. The nictitating membrane's presence in diverse species underscores its adaptive value for active lifestyles, enabling efficient tear management without compromising visual acuity.[28][29]
Functions
Protective and Lubricative Roles
Basal tears, produced continuously at a rate of approximately 1 μL per minute per eye, form the foundational layer responsible for the protective and lubricative functions of the tear film, ensuring ongoing ocular surface maintenance.[2] These tears create a stable, multilayered film that coats the cornea and conjunctiva, preventing desiccation and mechanical damage during everyday activities like blinking.[3]The lubricative role of tears is primarily mediated by the mucin layer, which anchors to the corneal epithelium and reduces friction between the eyelid and ocular surface during blinks, thereby preventing corneal abrasion and maintaining smooth visual clarity.[30] Mucins, including gel-forming types like MUC5AC secreted by conjunctival goblet cells, provide viscosity and anti-adhesive properties that facilitate shear-thinning behavior, allowing efficient spreading of the tear film without excessive resistance.[31] This lubrication is essential for protecting the delicate epithelial cells from mechanical stress, with disruptions leading to conditions like dry eye syndrome.[32]In terms of protection, tears serve as a mechanical and chemical barrier against environmental threats. The continuous flow of basal tears flushes irritants, debris, and pathogens from the ocular surface, aiding in the clearance of allergens and reducing infection risk.[31] Antimicrobially, components such as lysozyme hydrolyze β-1,4-glycosidic bonds in the peptidoglycan of bacterial cell walls, particularly targeting Gram-positive bacteria and contributing to innate immune defense.[33] Additionally, tear buffering systems, primarily involving bicarbonate, maintain ocular pH around 7.4 by neutralizing acids and bases, with more effective responses to acidic challenges to preserve epithelial integrity.[34]The lipid layer, derived from meibomian glands, forms an outermost barrier that minimizes evaporation of the aqueous component, preserving corneal hydration and preventing hyperosmolarity that could damage epithelial cells.[35] This evaporation resistance is achieved through the amphiphilic nature of lipids like cholesterol and fatty acids, which create a compact interface at the air-tear boundary.[36] Furthermore, tears deliver vital nutrients to the avascular cornea, including dissolved oxygen from atmospheric exposure and glucose for metabolic support, ensuring epithelial viability without vascular supply.[2]Tears also support wound healing by containing growth factors such as epidermal growth factor (EGF), which stimulates epithelial cell proliferation and migration to repair corneal abrasions.[37] EGF, present in tear fluid at concentrations around 0.1–10 ng/mL, activates receptor signaling pathways that accelerate re-epithelialization, often in synergy with other factors like transforming growth factor-α.[38] This reparative function underscores tears' role in maintaining long-term ocular surface homeostasis.[37]
Emotional and Communicative Roles
Emotional tears, distinct from basal or reflex tears, play a significant role in emotional regulation by facilitating catharsis and reducing physiological stress. According to catharsis theory, crying allows for the release of pent-up emotional tension, leading to mood improvement in approximately 30% of episodes, particularly when the underlying issue is resolved.[39] This process is supported by evidence that emotional crying activates the parasympathetic nervous system, promoting self-soothing through vagal rebound and potential oxytocin release, which enhances feelings of attachment and security.[40] Furthermore, emotional tears contain higher concentrations of stress-related proteins and hormones, such as adrenocorticotropic hormone and leucine-enkephalin, compared to other tear types, suggesting a mechanism for excreting toxins accumulated during distress.In social contexts, tears serve as a potent signal of vulnerability, universally eliciting empathy and intentions to provide support across cultures. A large-scale study involving 7,007 participants from 41 countries found that visible emotional tears increase observers' prosocial intentions by a moderate effect size (d = 0.49), mediated by empathic concern rather than personal distress, with stronger effects in higher well-being societies.[41] This signaling function promotes social bonding, as tears handicap vision and convey submission or need, discouraging aggression and fostering affiliation.[42] In infants, emotional tears emerge around 1-2 months and act as visual distress signals that amplify caregiving responses; neuroimaging shows that infant tearful faces activate somatosensory pain regions and mentalizing areas in observers' brains more intensely than adult tears, prompting protective behaviors to alleviate the child's distress.[43] Among adults, tears facilitate conflict resolution by soliciting help and empathy, as observers report greater willingness to offer emotional support or mediate disputes when tears are present, enhancing relational repair.Gender differences influence crying frequency, with women experiencing emotional crying 30-64 times per year compared to 6-17 times for men, a pattern observed consistently across studies.[44] This disparity may stem from hormonal factors, including higher prolactin levels in women that promote crying proneness and lower testosterone in men that inhibits it.[44]As non-verbal cues, tears amplify the perceived intensity of facial expressions, drawing visual attention to the eyes and cheeks while heightening attributions of sadness and emotional depth. This enhancement engages empathy-related brain circuits, such as those involved in mentalizing, making tearful expressions more compelling for interpersonal understanding.
Neurology
Reflex Pathways
The reflex pathways governing involuntary tear production, known as reflex tears, involve a well-defined neural circuit that responds rapidly to ocular irritants. The afferent limb of this pathway is mediated by the ophthalmic division (V1) of the trigeminal nerve (cranial nerve V), which innervates sensory receptors in the cornea and conjunctiva to detect mechanical, chemical, or thermal irritants.[45] These sensory fibers, primarily nasociliary branches, transmit signals to the brainstem, where they synapse in the principal sensory nucleus or descend to the spinal trigeminal nucleus for processing of pain and irritation.[46] The spinal trigeminal nucleus integrates these inputs, facilitating the coordination of protective responses including lacrimation.[46]The efferent limb is predominantly parasympathetic, originating from the superior salivatory nucleus in the pons, which sends preganglionic fibers via the facial nerve (cranial nerve VII) and the greater petrosal nerve to the pterygopalatine (sphenopalatine) ganglion.[46] Postganglionic parasympathetic fibers then travel along the zygomatic and lacrimal nerves to innervate the lacrimal gland, stimulating aqueous tear secretion through cholinergic mechanisms.[47] This parasympathetic activation forms the core of the reflex arc, which operates through brainstem structures in the pons and medulla, enabling a short latency response on the order of milliseconds to protect the ocular surface from irritants.[45]Sympathetic modulation plays a minor role in this pathway, with fibers from the superior cervical ganglion releasing norepinephrine to influence lacrimal gland blood flow and potentially basal secretion, though it does not drive the primary reflex response.[48] In contrast to emotional tearing, which involves higher cortical integration, the reflex pathway remains a peripheral, brainstem-mediated circuit focused on immediate ocular defense.[46]
Emotional Mechanisms
Emotional tearing is primarily regulated by the limbic system, where the amygdala processes emotional stimuli such as distress or empathy, subsequently signaling the hypothalamus to orchestrate an autonomic response that culminates in lacrimal gland activation.[4] This pathway integrates higher-order emotional appraisal with visceral motor control through the central autonomic network, distinguishing emotional tears from irritant-induced ones.[4]The hypothalamus serves as a key integrator, activating parasympathetic outflow via the superior salivatory nucleus and the facial nerve (cranial nerve VII), which innervates the lacrimal glands to promote tear secretion; this contrasts with the sensory-driven trigeminal pathway for reflex tears.[4]Acetylcholine, released from parasympathetic nerve endings, binds to muscarinic receptors on lacrimal acinar cells to stimulate fluid secretion, forming the neurochemical basis for this response.[49]The periaqueductal gray receives inputs from the amygdala and hypothalamus, integrating emotional and autonomic signals to modulate tear production.[4] Cortical regions further modulate emotional tearing: the medial prefrontal cortex shows increased activity during crying, potentially involved in regulating emotional expression, while the insula, linked to empathy via spindle neurons, contributes to the emotional resonance that may trigger tears.[4] Endogenous opioids contribute to the emotional context by dampening distress signals, potentially providing painrelief through their anti-nociceptive effects during prolonged crying episodes.[4]Functional MRI studies since 2015 have revealed orbitofrontal cortex activation during emotional processing of crying stimuli, underscoring its role in evaluating the affective salience of tear-inducing events.[50] Gender differences in hypothalamic responses to negative emotional stimuli show greater activation in women, which may underlie observed variations in crying frequency and intensity.[51]
Evolutionary Aspects
Origins in Vertebrates
In the earliest vertebrates, such as fish and amphibians, eye protection relies on simple mucous secretions rather than specialized tear glands. Aquatic environments provide constant hydration, so fish produce a thin mucus layer from goblet cells in the conjunctiva and corneal epithelium to shield the eye from pathogens, debris, and osmotic stress, without dedicated lacrimal structures.[52] This mucous film is analogous to early forms of ocular lubrication, evolving as part of the vertebrate eye's adaptation to submersion, where water itself aids in maintaining corneal integrity. In amphibians, which bridge aquatic and terrestrial life, similar mucous secretions persist, supplemented by rudimentary orbital glands that secrete viscous fluids to prevent desiccation during brief land excursions.[53]The transition to fully terrestrial life in tetrapods, beginning around 375 million years ago during the Devonian period, marked the emergence of more complex tear production mechanisms, including the development of lacrimal glands approximately 300 million years ago in early amniotes. These glands arose as an evolutionary innovation to lubricate and protect the exposed cornea in dry air, producing an aqueous tear film that spreads via blinking—a behavior that originated concurrently with the water-to-land shift.[52] In early tetrapods like Acanthostega, osteological evidence suggests the presence of retractor bulbi muscles facilitating eye retraction and rudimentary wetting, setting the stage for glandular elaboration in subsequent lineages.[54]Mammalian adaptations further refined tear production for arid environments, with enhanced lacrimal glands providing increased aqueous secretion to combat evaporation and maintain ocular homeostasis. Non-primate mammals retain a nictitating membrane, a vestigial third eyelid that aids in distributing tears efficiently across the cornea.[55] Comparatively, birds and reptiles rely heavily on the Harderian gland for lipid-rich secretions that stabilize the tear film, a structure conserved across sauropsids and linked to their ectothermic lifestyles and diverse habitats.[53] This glandular specialization reflects phylogenetic divergence, yet both groups share conserved parasympathetic innervation via the facial nerve for reflex tear secretion, underscoring a deep homology in neural control.[56]Fossil evidence for tear drainage structures is inferred from skull anatomy in early synapsids, the mammalian lineage's precursors, dating back to the Late Carboniferous around 300 million years ago. In pelycosaur-grade synapsids like Dimetrodon, the lacrimal bone forms a canal for the nasolacrimal duct, indicating an early apparatus for channeling secretions away from the eye to prevent overflow.[57] Later cynodonts, such as Riograndia from the Late Triassic (~225 million years ago), preserve clear openings for the lacrimal duct bordered by the maxilla and lacrimal bones, suggesting functional tear drainage adapted for terrestrial vision.[57] These features highlight the gradual refinement of the lacrimal system in synapsids amid increasing aridity during the Permian.
Development of Psychic Tears
Psychic tears, also known as emotional or basal tears triggered by psychological stimuli, represent a uniquely humanadaptation in the evolution of emotional expression, emerging as visible lacrimation accompanying distress vocalizations. While the order Primates originated approximately 60 million years ago, fostering advanced social bonding through grooming and vocal signals, the production of emotional tears appears absent in non-humanprimates and most mammals. This innovation likely coincided with the development of more complex emotions in early Homospecies around 2 million years ago, enhancing non-aggressive signaling of vulnerability in increasingly cooperative groups.[23][4]In human infants, emotional crying begins as primarily vocal distress calls to solicit caregiving, with visible tears developing several months after birth as lacrimal glands mature, tying into attachment behaviors that ensure survival. This progression reflects an evolutionary refinement where tears amplify the signal of need without the risks of aggressive displays, promoting parental investment and group cohesion as per attachment theory, which posits crying as an innate appeal for proximity to caregivers. Comparative studies show that while chimpanzees exhibit proto-emotional responses through intense vocalizations during separation or weaning, they do not produce accompanying tears, relying instead on auditory and facial cues for social bonding. Similarly, dogs demonstrate oxytocin-mediated increases in tear volume during joyful reunions with owners, suggesting an emotional component, but this lacks the full multimodal integration of sobbing and tears seen in humans.[4][58][59][60]Elephants display profound distress and social mourning behaviors, yet lack evidence of emotional tearing, with any ocular fluid stemming from non-emotional sources like temporal glands.[4]The genetic underpinnings of psychic tears involve conserved mechanisms for lacrimal gland development across vertebrates, notably the FOXC1 transcription factor, which regulates glandular outgrowth and branching essential for tear production.[61] However, the specific emotional regulation of tearing is modulated by neuropeptides such as oxytocin and endogenous opioids, which facilitate attachment and stressrelief. Psychic tears are distinguished from basal or reflex types by their higher concentrations of proteins and certain hormones, such as adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and prolactin, as well as neuropeptides like leu-enkephalin.[62][4] This dual basis underscores the adaptive value of psychic tears in human evolution, enabling nuanced communication that fosters empathy and social support without verbal language.
Cultural and Social Aspects
Symbolism in Art and Literature
In religious texts, particularly the Bible, tears serve as a profound symbol of repentance and spiritual purification. The Psalms frequently depict tears as an offering to God, as in Psalm 56:8, where they are collected in a divine "bottle," signifying divine attentiveness to human sorrow and the potential for redemption through contrition. This imagery extends to purification, where weeping represents a cleansing of the soul from sin, akin to a second baptism that enables spiritual enlightenment and union with the divine.[63]In literature, tears amplify pathos in Shakespearean tragedies, evoking audience empathy through characters' raw vulnerability. In King Lear, Cordelia's tears during her reunion with her father, King Lear, underscore forgiveness and filial devotion, heightening the emotional stakes and contributing to the play's tragic catharsis by contrasting innocence against familial betrayal.[64] Similarly, the Romantic era elevated crying as a cathartic release, with poets like Percy Bysshe Shelley portraying tears as a transformative emotional outlet that resolves inner turmoil and fosters renewal, as seen in the redemptive weeping in Prometheus Unbound.[65]Visual art has long employed tears to convey profound sorrow and human frailty. During the Renaissance, Michelangelo's Pietà (1498–1499) captures maternal grief through the Virgin Mary's serene yet anguished expression as she cradles Christ's body, symbolizing universal compassion and the quiet endurance of loss without explicit tears but implying an inner well of sorrow. In modern abstract art, Frida Kahlo integrated tears into her self-portraits to externalize emotional devastation; in The Broken Column (1944), tears stream down her face amid a shattered spine and piercing nails, representing unyielding physical and psychological pain while asserting defiant resilience.[66]In film and media, close-up shots of tears powerfully evoke viewer empathy by mimicking facial expressions that trigger mirror neuron responses. Directors like Steven Spielberg in Schindler's List (1993) use such close-ups to immerse audiences in characters' grief, fostering shared emotional processing as theorized in neurocinematic studies.[67] By the 20th century, postmodern works shifted toward ironic tears, subverting traditional pathos; in films like David Lynch's Blue Velvet (1986), crying becomes a detached, absurd spectacle that critiques emotional authenticity in a fragmented society.[68]Gender tropes in literature often associate tears with femininity, reinforcing Victorian ideals of women as emotionally expressive yet fragile. In sensation novels like Wilkie Collins's The Woman in White (1859), female characters' copious weeping highlights their vulnerability and moral purity, aligning tears with domestic sentimentality and social constraints on women.[69] Feminist literature challenges this by depicting tears as a universal human response unbound by gender, as in Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway (1925), where male and female characters alike cry to confront societal pressures, dismantling stereotypes of feminine hysteria.[70]
Cross-Cultural Perspectives
In Western societies, emotional crying is generally more socially acceptable for women and children than for men, where it has historically been suppressed due to norms associating tears with weakness.[71] Post-2000 studies indicate a gradual increase in male openness to crying, particularly in contexts of gender equality and emotional vulnerability, reflecting shifts toward greater acceptance in individualistic cultures like the United States and Europe. As of 2024, surveys and cultural analyses indicate growing acceptance of male crying in Western societies, with public figures and media portraying it as a sign of emotional health.[72][73][74]In collectivist cultures such as Japan and China, tears often signify a disruption to social harmony, leading to norms that discourage public crying to maintain group cohesion and emotional restraint.[71] Public displays of tears are rare, as they may be perceived as burdensome to others or indicative of personal failure in upholding collective values.[75]Latin American and Mediterranean cultures tend to be more expressive regarding tears, particularly in mourning rituals where crying serves as a communal release of grief and respect for the deceased. For instance, in Mexican traditions like Día de los Muertos, tears accompany celebrations of the dead, blending sorrow with communal remembrance to honor familial bonds.[76][77] In some Mediterranean practices, such as those in southern Italy and Greece, ritual wailing and tearing of garments historically emphasized overt emotional display during funerals.[78]Among Indigenous groups, such as certain Native American tribes, tears play a role in spiritual practices like the Lakotavision quest (Hanblečeyapi, or "crying for a vision"), where crying during fasting and prayer facilitates purification and connection to guardian spirits for personal insight and healing.[79]Research indicates higher crying frequencies in individualistic societies compared to collectivist ones.[71] Studies on emotional regulation suggest that acculturation and cross-cultural exposure influence emotional expressions across cultures.[80]
Pathology
Insufficient Tear Production
Insufficient tear production, a key feature of aqueous-deficient dry eye, arises when the lacrimal glands produce inadequate volumes of basal tears, compromising the ocular surface and leading to discomfort and potential corneal damage.[81]Common causes include aging, which diminishes lacrimal gland function and tear secretion, typically beginning after age 50 and affecting up to 35% of adults over 65 with keratoconjunctivitis sicca (KCS).[82] Hormonal shifts during menopause in women further reduce tear production by altering glandular activity, increasing dry eye risk in postmenopausal individuals.[83] Refractive surgeries such as LASIK can also impair tear production through nerve damage and inflammation, with symptoms persisting in some patients for months or longer.[84]Keratoconjunctivitis sicca (KCS), the hallmark condition of insufficient tearing, manifests as dry eye syndrome and is often autoimmune in origin, particularly in Sjögren's syndrome, where lymphocytic infiltration targets lacrimal and salivary glands.[82] Sjögren's syndrome affects an estimated 1–72 per 10,000 people globally, with higher rates (up to 0.25% or 1 in 400) in screened populations and objective KCS evident in 55.5%–88% of systemic sclerosis cases.[85][86] Symptoms include ocular irritation, burning, foreign body sensation, and blurred vision due to unstable tear film and surface epithelial damage.[87]Another notable cause is familial dysautonomia, a raregenetic disorder primarily affecting individuals of Ashkenazi Jewish descent, with a carrier frequency of about 1 in 32 and incidence of 1 in 3,700 in that population.[88] This autonomic nervous system failure leads to severely reduced tear production—often described as an inability to produce tears, with studies indicating up to 90% reduction—resulting in corneal insensitivity and recurrent ulcers.[89]Diagnosis relies on objective tests assessing tear quantity and quality. The Schirmer test measures basal tear production by wetting of a filter paper strip over 5 minutes, with values below 5 mm indicating severe aqueous deficiency and below 10 mm supporting dry eye diagnosis per Dry Eye Workshop criteria.[81][90]Tear breakup time (TBUT), evaluated via fluorescein instillation, is reduced below 10 seconds in dry eye, reflecting instability from insufficient aqueous component.[87] Tear biomarkers, such as elevated matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) levels, serve as indicators of underlying inflammation, with point-of-care immunoassays detecting MMP-9 positivity in severe cases to guide targeted therapy.[91][92]Treatments aim to restore ocular surface homeostasis and address inflammation. Artificial tears provide symptomatic relief by supplementing the deficient aqueous layer, used frequently in mild to moderate cases.[93] Topical cyclosporine eye drops (0.05%) inhibit T-cell mediated inflammation in the lacrimal glands, improving tear production and symptoms in autoimmune dry eye, often combined with other modalities for enhanced efficacy.[94] Punctal plugs occlude tear drainage ducts to conserve existing tears, increasing retention and surface wetness, particularly beneficial in moderate KCS.[95] In May 2025, the FDA approved acoltremon (Tryptyr) ophthalmic solution 0.003%, a TRPM8 agonist that stimulates natural tear production, for treating signs and symptoms of dry eye disease.[96] Emerging regenerative approaches, including stem cell therapies targeting lacrimal gland repair, have shown promise in post-2020 clinical trials for severe dry eye, with mesenchymal stem cells modulating inflammation and promoting tissue regeneration in preclinical and early-phase studies.[97][98]
Excessive or Abnormal Tearing
Excessive or abnormal tearing, known as epiphora, occurs when tears overflow onto the cheek due to overproduction or impaired drainage, often stemming from obstructions in the lacrimal drainage system.[19] Common causes include nasolacrimal duct obstruction, which can result from aging-related narrowing, chronic infections, or inflammation, leading to poor tear outflow.[99] In elderly populations, epiphora is particularly prevalent, with lacrimal obstruction accounting for approximately 46% of cases in clinical studies, and overall symptomatic tearing affecting a significant portion due to age-related changes in eyelid function and ocular surface health.[99][100]Another form of abnormal tearing is Bogorad's syndrome, also called crocodile tears syndrome, characterized by gustatory lacrimation where eating or salivary stimulation triggers excessive tearing.[101] This condition arises from aberrant regeneration of the facial nerve following damage, such as after Bell's palsy or trauma, resulting in miswiring between salivary and lacrimal pathways.[101] The tearing is reflexive and unilateral, typically emerging months after the initial nerve injury.[101]Allergic conjunctivitis can also induce excessive tearing as part of an immune response to allergens like pollen or dust.[102]Histamine release from mast cells in the conjunctiva stimulates reflex tearing to flush irritants, often accompanied by itching, redness, and swelling.[103] This hypersecretion is a protective mechanism but becomes abnormal when persistent or severe.[103]Diagnosis of excessive tearing involves assessing tear drainage and production. The fluorescein dye disappearance test (FDDT) evaluates outflow by instilling fluorescein in the eye and observing clearance time; delayed disappearance (beyond 10 minutes) indicates obstruction.[104] Tear osmolarity measurement helps identify underlying ocular surface issues; values exceeding 316 mOsm/kg suggest hyperosmolarity that may drive reflex tearing.[105]Management depends on the underlying cause. For duct obstructions, dacryocystorhinostomy (DCR) surgery creates a new drainage pathway from the lacrimal sac to the nasal cavity, achieving success rates of 85-95% in resolving epiphora.[106] In Bogorad's syndrome, botulinum toxin injections into the lacrimal gland temporarily inhibit tearing, providing relief for 3-6 months with minimal side effects.[101] For allergic conjunctivitis, topical antihistamines or mast cell stabilizers reduce histamine-mediated tearing and inflammation.[102]
Neurological Dysregulation
Neurological dysregulation of tear production and emotional expression primarily manifests in conditions like pseudobulbar affect (PBA), a disorder characterized by sudden, involuntary outbursts of crying or laughing that are disproportionate to or incongruent with the individual's actual emotional state.[107] PBA often arises following neurological events such as stroke or in progressive diseases like multiple sclerosis (MS) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), where it affects approximately 38% of ALS patients according to meta-analyses of clinical studies.[108] These episodes involve excessive tearing during crying fits, stemming from disrupted neural pathways that normally modulate emotional responses.[109]The underlying causes of PBA center on damage to the frontal lobes and corticobulbar tracts, which impair the brain's inhibitory control over emotional reflexes, leading to uninhibited lacrimal gland activation during affective outbursts.[110] In ALS and MS, degeneration of upper motor neurons in these pathways exacerbates the condition, while post-stroke lesions in similar regions can trigger it acutely.[111] Beyond PBA, other neurological disorders contribute to tear dysregulation; for instance, Parkinson's disease is associated with reduced basal tear production due to autonomic dysfunction and decreased blink rate, resulting in dry eye symptoms in up to 61% of patients.[112] Conversely, some migraine auras include unilateral tearing as part of autonomic features, affecting about 45% of migraineurs with ocular symptoms.[113]Diagnosis of neurological dysregulation, particularly PBA, relies on clinical observation of recurrent, involuntary episodes and exclusion of peripheral tear disorders through history and examination, often using validated scales like the Center for Neurologic Study-Lability Scale (CNS-LS).[114] Functional MRI (fMRI) studies reveal limbic system dysregulation, with altered connectivity in emotional processing networks in affected individuals compared to controls.[115] Differentiation from genuine emotional crying hinges on the involuntary nature of PBA episodes, which lack corresponding internal feelings and resolve quickly without emotional residue, unlike reflexive tearing pathways in normal emotional mechanisms.[116]Treatment focuses on symptom management; the combination of dextromethorphan and quinidine (Nuedexta), approved by the FDA in 2010, reduces PBA episode frequency and severity by modulating glutamatergic activity in randomized controlled trials.[117] Antidepressants such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) provide adjunctive relief in smaller studies by enhancing serotonergic inhibition of emotional lability.[118] Emerging approaches in the 2020s include neuromodulation techniques like audio-visual entrainment therapy, which has shown promise in reducing PBA symptoms through brainwave synchronization in preliminary trials with sustained effects at three months.[119] For Parkinson's-related hyposecretion, artificial tears address symptoms, while migraine-associated tearing typically resolves with acute abortive therapies.[120]