Graphic photos show the damage not removing eye makeup before bed can cause
Whether you’re stumbling through the door after a night on the negronis or you’re Just. Too. Tired after a Netflix binge, taking off your makeup before bed can often slip down the must-do list.
Not cleansing the face of makeup at night is known to be a bad skin care habit. But if you need further evidence that you really shouldn’t go to bed in your mascara, you’ll do well to listen to the warning by Theresa Lynch.
As documented in a recent article published by the American Academy of Ophthalmology, Lynch, a 50-year-old from Sydney, revealed that she was almost left blind after failing to remove her mascara properly for a period of 25 years. The photographic evidence is pretty graphic.
After seeking medical advice for eye irritation, discharge, and an uncomfortable sensation beneath her eyelids, Lynch, a mother of two, was horrified when doctors discovered she had calcified bumps, known as concretions, underneath her eyelids caused by years of mascara buildup.
These were consistent with years of mascara use, with fragments of unwashed mascara depositing under her eyelids over the years.
The lumps posed a serious risk to her vision, and it took general anesthetic and a 90-minute procedure to remove them
Now Lynch and her ophthalmic surgeon, Dana Robaei, MBBS, want to raise awareness about the dangers of sleeping in makeup by releasing the gruesome images of her infected eyes.
“The lumps were embedded so deep that particles were building up on top of each other,” Lynch said.
“I was so uncomfortable. My eyelids were swollen and heavy because I left it for so long.”
Like many people, Lynch had fallen into a bad habit of wearing makeup and not washing it off properly before bed.
“I should never have let it get this far,” she said.
“It’s so important to properly take your makeup off every single night. You can’t miss a single day.”
Robaei, who is consultant ophthalmologist at Australia’s Forest Eye Surgery, said the case should serve as a warning to others.
“Every time Theresa was blinking, these bumps were rubbing on the surface of the eye, and they pose a risk to her vision,” Robaei told the Daily Mail.
“If the scratch on the surface of the eye got infected, there is a risk this could be potentially blinding, but that would be rare.”
And even though the surgery was successful, Lynch’s eyes could continue to cause her discomfort.
“She has suffered permanent scarring on her eyelid and the surface of her cornea,” Robaei continued. “The symptoms are like somebody throwing a handful of sand in your eye — it’s constantly irritating.”



تعليقات
إرسال تعليق