Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Cornea Eye Blind for 'Edible' Mushrooms of Contact Lenses


County Durham, England, A grandparent must be willing to lose an eye because of an infection. The reason, the grandmother corneas 'eaten' by a fungus that grows on the contact lens.

June Scott (62 years old) should be treated in the hospital for three weeks after contact lens eyes began to burn. Fungal infection known as Fusarium has attacked this woman's left eye.
After three surgeries to remove an infection from his fruitless, doctors were forced to perform the last operation to remove the left cornea Scott.
"I went to the doctor and they said never seen a case like this. Such was eating something in my eyes, I can not stand to see the light," said June Scott, a native of Spain, as reported by the Daily Mail, Tuesday (12 / 2/2013).
At first, Scott thought there hair into her eyes. But the next day, his left eye condition worsened and she was rushed to the hospital.
"I was given eye drops but the condition is getting worse," he added.
Scott bought a set of contact lenses from a British company before traveling to his holiday home in Alicante, Spain, in October last year. But after that there's something wrong in his left eye. He was immediately rushed to a specialist unit at the Hospital Clinico San Juan.
Surgeons struggled for almost a month to save his eyesight, to undergo three surgeries in an effort to clear the infection.
But just before the new year, the medical officer was forced to lift the eyes of women living in Chester-le-Street, County Durham, England, is.
"I had to take antibiotics for 3 weeks and had to go to the hospital every day at 9 am until 5 pm. Was truly awful and the pain was so severe that I had to go to hospital in the middle of the night," recalls Scott.
A similar case was also experienced by Jacqueline Stone (42 years). Jacqueline claimed to be hospitalized for 17 weeks after wearing disposable contact lenses with leading brands purchased through online websites. When used, the lens may be uncomfortable, even painful incredible. Unfortunately, when Stone tried to remove them, there is a lens that actually stuck his left eye and remained attached to the eye.
Jacqueline vision becomes blurred. To overcome this, Jacqueline visiting ophthalmologist at Broomfield Hospital in Chelmsford, Essex and the doctor gave him eye drops. Instead of improving, math teachers are feeling tremendous pain she had to go the ER Moorfields Eye Hospital, London. There Jackqu given more eye drops. However, the condition is even worse.
His left eyelid began to blister, his eyes finally feels like 'explode', 'split' into two eyeballs. Turns out he had a fungal infection of the eye caused by Fusarium.
Sources: http://health.detik.com/read/2013/02/12/132928/2167822/1202/

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