Some stories will sound so unbelievable but are true, this is a typical example of such stories.
A
doctor preparing to perform a routine cataract surgery on a 67-year-old patient
discovered a peculiar clump of disposable contact lenses lodged in the
patient's eye socket. Ophthalmologist Rupal Morjaria, who reported the
mucus-laden discovery to the British Medical Journal, found an initial clump
of 17 contacts before locating another 10 more, apparently welded to the
patient's eyeball.
"It
was such a large mass," Morjaria told Optometry Today. "All contact
lenses were stuck together. We were really surprised that the patient didn't
notice it because it would cause quite a lot of irritation while it was sitting
there."
Finding
such a ghastly mass of 35 years' worth of contacts is uncommon, even for eye
doctors. "None of us have ever seen this before," said Morjaria, who
made the discovery in November 2016.
The
patient said her eyes were more comfortable, and she reportedly felt a sense of
relief after all the lenses were removed. That seems an entirely fair reaction,
even before you consider the clump had likely become home to a slimy bacterial
ecosystem.
Human
eyeballs are notoriously sensitive, as most anyone else who has ever lost a
contact inside their eye can attest. So how did this person have such a big
clump in there for so long without noticing? She reportedly felt nothing more
serious than some mild discomfort, which she assumed was a sign of getting
older. Morjaria and her team suggested the patient's unusually deep-set eyes
may have been the culprit, providing the space for all those contacts to hide,
while the fact she had poorer vision in her right eye may help explain why so
many ended up there.
For
most people, even getting a single contact lodged in the eye is rare. But
Morjaria says the risk of such incidents and other contact-related maladies has
increased now that people can just buy their contact lenses off the internet,
without needing an optometrist to examine their eyes first. "In this day
and age, when it is so easy to purchase contact lenses online, people become
lax about having regular check-ups," she said. "Contact lenses are
used all the time, but if they are not appropriately monitored we see people
with serious eye infections that can cause them to lose their sight."
source: Medical Journal
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