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Health24.com | Doctors find 27 contact lenses in woman’s eye

Doctors intending to perform cataract surgery on a 67-year-old woman in Britain found something rather unexpected: 17 contact lenses mashed together in her right eye.

In a case report published in the British Medical Journal, the doctors said that the woman had worn monthly disposable contact lenses for 35 years; she had “deep set eyes” and poorer vision in that eye, which they said might have contributed to a failure to remove some of the lenses.

The doctors said the 17 lenses were bound together by mucus. A further 10 were found by the surgeon using a microscope. Rupal Morjaria, a specialist trainee in ophthalmology, said the “large mass” would have caused quite a lot of irritation. The patient had chalked it up to old age and dry eye, Morjaria said.

Improper use of contact lenses can cause damage

A previous study mentioned on Health24 showed that unsafe use of contact lenses can contribute to serious eye damage. Sleeping with contact lenses or leaving them in for too long can trigger serious eye injuries. Sleeping with your contact lenses in can also increase your risk of eye infection. And infection and even blindness can stem from the use of non-prescriptive, decorative contact lenses.

Use your contact lenses correctly

But don’t let that put you off your contact lenses for good. Contact lenses provide excellent vision correction if you take care of them properly:

  • Never keep contact lenses in for longer than the prescribed amount of time.
  • Always store contact lenses in the proper storage, in the correct fluid.
  • Always wash your hands properly before handling contact lenses.

Take them out properly

Taking contact lenses out before going to sleep or after wearing them for a certain amount of time is very important. But there is a correct way:

  • Wash your hands with soap and water.
  • Roll your eyes upwards and pull the lower lid outwards and downwards with your middle finger.
  • Place your middle finger on your eyelid and the tip of your index finger on the lower half of the lens.
  • Slide the contact lens downwards from the cornea onto the white of the eye.
  • Compress the contact lens using your thumb and index finger to break the seal that attaches it against the eye.
  • Clean and sterilise or discard, according to the manufacturer’s or optometrist’s instructions.

Read more: 

Glasses and contact lenses

Worn out contact lenses?

‘My novelty contact lenses ripped my cornea’

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Health24.com | 5 contact lens horror stories that will make you squirm

Doctors wanting to perform cataract surgery on a 67-year-old woman in Britain found something rather unexpected: 17 contact lenses mashed together in her right eye, and then a further 10.

Whilst this may be an unusual scenario, many people have got themselves into trouble simply because of problems with their contact lenses. We take a closer look at this and a few other horrifying contact lens stories.

Doctors find 27 contact lenses in woman’s eye

In a case report published in the British Medical Journal, the doctors said that the woman had worn monthly disposable contact lenses for 35 years; she had “deep set eyes” and poorer vision in the one eye, which they said might have contributed to a failure to remove some of the lenses.

The doctors said the 17 lenses were bound together by mucus. A further 10 were found by the surgeon using a microscope.

‘My novelty contact lenses ripped my cornea’

During Halloween in 2015, a student from South Wales was hospitalised after her novelty contact ripped her cornea. 18-year-old Tia Goode dressed up as a leopard for Halloween and added cat-eye contact lenses to complete her look. When she came home from a night out, she tried to remove her contact lenses but found that they were stuck. After spending 45 minutes trying to get them out, Goode eventually pulled the contact out but managed to also rip out her cornea, the transparent layer covering her eye.

Man’s eye removed after contact lens infected by a parasite

In December 2016, paramedic Andrew Carthew from Cornwall made headlines; not for saving someone’s life, but after he was forced to have an eye removed after his contact lenses were infected by a parasite. Carthew woke up with a red, sore eye, according to the Daily Mail, and thought it was conjunctivitis. But soon after that he suffered severe pain in his left eye. It turns out a parasite was trapped between the lens and the eye, allowing it to curl up into the eyeball.

Woman swam with contact lenses – now she is blind in one eye

It’s often not enough to just take of your contact lenses; you must also be weary of the damage that can be done by unusual activities. According to the Daily Mail, Jennie Hurst wore monthly contact lenses and didn’t realise that swimming could cause be detrimental. In 2012 she went for a dip in the public pool and shortly afterward she went blind in her left eye — the result of a vicious infection. “I felt so guilty — if I’d known I’d have whipped them out in seconds and worn my glasses instead,” she told the British publication.

I am blind after handling my contact lenses with wet fingers

In 2011 Irenie Ekkeshis’s one eye started to itch. At first she thought it was simply an irritation, but then he experience excruciating pain and suddenly lost the sight in the eye. According to the BBC, “within days she was told she had Acanthamoeba Keratitis (AK), a rare but serious eye infection caused by a micro-organism that’s common in tap water, sea water and swimming pools”. Ekkeshis said she felt frightened. “By then I had lost the vision in my right eye. It was like looking through a foggy bathroom mirror. I could see colours and shapes but not much else,” she told the BBC.

Read more:

Don’t take chances with your contact lenses

Cheap contact lenses can be a nightmare

Worn out contact lenses?

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