• SHOCKING! Doctors Remove 60 live worms from woman's eyes

    Sci & Tech
    SHOCKING! Doctors Remove 60 live worms from woman's eyes
    Doctors were horrified to see that live worms were infesting the area between her eyeballs and eyelids after doing an inspection.

    Digital Desk: In a horrifying procedure, doctors in China recently removed over 60 live worms from a patient's eyes. The Mirror claims that the unidentified woman had been complaining of itchy eyes and that her anxiety increased when she saw a parasitic worm drop out of her eyes after massaging them to get rid of the tingling. After experiencing fear, she was taken right away to a hospital in Kunming, China. 

    Doctors were horrified to see that live worms were infesting the area between her eyeballs and eyelids after doing an inspection. They recovered almost 40 live worms from her right eye and over ten from her left eye. According to the Mirror, the medical professionals extracted around 60 parasites from the woman's eye.

    Operation director Dr. Guan stated that the patient was a rare case because of the remarkably high count of parasites. Roundworms of the Filarioidea kind, which are usually spread by fly bites, are thought to have infected the lady, according to Daily Express US. 

    However, the woman believes that the dogs and cats that carried the contagious larvae on their bodies are the source of her worm infestation. She believes that the infestation may have started as a result of her petting the animals and washing her eyes. 

    To monitor the risk of leftover larvae, the woman has been advised by doctors to have regular check-ups. In addition, they requested that she always wash her hands right away after touching pets.  

    In another strange discovery, a totally intact house fly was discovered within a man's intestines during a colonoscopy, leaving US physicians baffled. The discovery was uncovered when a 63-year-old Missouri man went in for a standard colon test. Everything was going according to plan during the colonoscopy until the medical professionals discovered a fully developed fly at the top of the large intestine or the transverse colon.

    The 63-year-old patient, whose name has not been made public, was similarly shocked to learn of the finding and didn't know how the bug entered his body. He admitted to the physicians that he had only drunk clear liquids before the treatment and that he had eaten lettuce and pizza the day before, but he did not remember ever seeing a fly on any of the food. Doctors stated the man showed no signs of having consumed it.