A woman lost the sight in one eye after going swimming in a pool at a hotel spa wearing contact lenses.
英国一位女性近日因戴着隐形眼镜在一家宾馆的温泉池游泳,导致一只眼睛失明。
Jennie Hurst, from Southampton, contracted acanthamoeba keratitis - a rare and painful infection caused by amoeba(变形虫) which naturally occurs in water.
The infection causes hypersensitivity to light and the 28-year-old said she was confined to a dark room for three months. She is now warning of the dangers of swimming or showering wearing contacts.
Ms Hurst underwent four operations, stays in hospital, and a treatment regime in which she had eye drops administered every half hour.
She said: "During that time I was literally confined to my bedroom with blackout blinds at the window. The only thing I could do was to listen to the radio.
"One evening, I was so desperate to look out of window to get a glimpse of the outside world that I opened my curtains in the middle of the night.
"As soon as I did this the moon shone in my eyes and it really hurt. I didn't do that again in a hurry."
Ms Hurst said she has been left with no vision in her left eye and the damage to her cornea could be permanent.
The environmental coordinator, who had been wearing contact lenses for five years, went swimming at a hotel while on a residential training course with work.
"The irony is that I don't even like swimming - I only did a few laps," she said.
"My consultants were quite surprised that I had gone swimming and probably thought that I had been a bit lazy whereas I wasn't aware of the problem at all - it didn't even enter my brain to take them out.
"I felt guilty that I had let it happen when actually I could have just taken my contacts out and saved everyone a lot of time and bother and myself a lot of pain.
"I have always been so careful with my contact lenses. I always remove them when sleeping and always use contactlens solution to wash them."