Usa news

Woman goes blind after contact lens mistake meant parasites burrowed in her eye

Brooklyn McCasland claims she got the nasty infection during a beach holiday with friends (Picture: Kennedy News and Media)

A woman has been left blind in her right eye after parasites burrowed into her cornea while swimming with contact lenses in.

Brooklyn McCasland, 23, said she was in the ‘worst pain she’d ever felt’ after going on a beach trip with friends in August.

The barista was told by doctors it was just sand in her eye, but the pain went on for weeks.

The outer layer of her eye began clouding over, and a specialist found parasites had burrowed into the Brooklyn’s cornea.

She said: ‘If I could have avoided all this pain by not swimming in my contacts, then I would have done it.’

Brooklyn, from Texas, has been forced to quit her job as her depth perception has been warped making working in a well-lit café nearly impossible.

The parasite, called acanthamoeba, lives in water and enters through microscopic tears in the eye.

The outer layer of her eye began clouding over, and a specialist found parasites had burrowed into the Brooklyn’s cornea (Picture: Kennedy News and Media)

The barista was told by doctors it was just sand in her eye, but the pain went on for weeks (Picture: Kennedy News and Media)

They are about 5,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair.

Brooklyn is now waiting for an expensive transplant that only has a small chance of restoring her sight.

Doctors thought the pain which ‘felt like glass’ was caused by an infection, but Brooklyn’s vision went blurry several weeks later.

She said: ‘They were still just shooting in the dark which was really frustrating. I remember praying.’

After travelling four hours to the specialist, she was diagnosed with acanthamoeba keratosis, MailOnline reports.

Brooklyn said: ‘It was a shock but also a relief to have everything answered.

‘For so long being misdiagnosed and not knowing what it is and it getting worse and being in pain.’

If caught early enough, doctors can prescribe eye drops which can kill the parasites.

In around 40% of cases doctors have to perform surgery, which involves scraping the outside of the eye to remove the parasites and repairing the area through transplant.

Brooklyn is urging contact wearers to be careful using them in water after being told by doctors ‘it is not a big deal’ to shower with them in.

She said: ‘That upset me, especially after finding out I did have it.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

Exit mobile version