A 19-year-old man from Iran has a cyst
with hair in his eyeball, and it’s not a sight “fur” sore eyes… The
extremely rare condition does not permanently affect his vision, but it
does impair it and gives him the feeling that a foreign object is in his
eyes. What it the hairy cyst and how can i be solved? Find out right
here.
The poor young Iranian’s eye suffers from
a very rare tumor named “limbal dermoid” and it is considered to be so
uncommon, that an ophthalmologist may see just one or a maximum of two
in his entire medical career.
In the case of this 19 year old man, the
weird formation was present since birth, and the patient said that it
had not bothered him until it started to gradually grow, and evidently
when it grew strands of hair. Throughout the 19 years of development,
the cyst reached a diameter of 5 millimeters and the man started to
complain that it was impairing his vision.
Although the cyst did not cause him any
pain, it did cause a certain degree of discomfort while blinking, and an
on-again-off-again feeling that there’s a foreign object in his eye.
Taking all that discomfort into account, the doctors from the Tabriz
University of Medical Sciences in Iran admitted the patient into the
hospital and performed a cosmetic surgery on his eye in order to remove
the bizarre 5mm by 6mm cyst.
The results of the surgery showed little
improvement in visual acuity. The man still had 20/20 vision on his left
eye, while as on his right eye, he had 20/60 due to the fact that he
had a lazy eye and an astigmatism.
You are probably now thinking that out of
all the places you can grow hair on your body, the est likely place for
that to happen would be your eyeball… Well, that’s entirely rue, so
let’s find out why this happened.
What is a limbal dermoid?
A limbal dermoid, also known as epibulbar
or conjunctival dermoids, is a congenital condition that is cause in
the womb, by the misplacement of certain cells in the eyeball. The
dermoid cells are skin cells which are able to sprout hair, but they can
also generate cartilage, sweat glands and in the worst case scenario…
teeth
The limbal dermoid is always a benign
tumor that does not significantly impair vision because it almost never
develops on the central part of the cornea. Its management depends on
the evolution of each case.
If it is a case in which the cyst remains
small and asymptomatic, the indication is to leave it alone, although
cosmetic surgery can be performed. If the cyst affects a patient’s
eyesight, as was the case of the 19-year-old Iranian, surgery is highly
indicated to stop the decrease of the patient’s vision.
Below you can see some more pictures of limbal dermoid cysts.
And in the video below, you can see how a limbal dermoid is removed.
No comments:
Post a Comment