By Marc Lallanilla
Calvino Inman first noticed haemolacria - bleeding from the eyes - as a teenager in 2009.
Credit: YouTube screengrab from mickeyblogs2
A
young man from Tennessee is living with an alarming medical condition — without
warning, he begins to bleed from his eyes. And some of the best doctors in the
country are completely stumped by his ailment.
What's
more confounding is that the condition is very rare, but some of the only other
people known to bleed from the eyes — a condition called haemolacria — are also
from Tennessee.
At
age 22, Michael Spann was walking down the stairs of his home in Antioch,
Tenn., when he was gripped by an extremely painful headache. "I felt like
I got hit in the head with a sledgehammer," he told the Tennessean.
Moments later, Spann realized that blood was trickling from his eyes, nose and
mouth.
The bleeding and headaches became
a daily occurrence for Spann; now, about seven years later, they happen only
once or twice a week. Though he's hampered by a lack of health insurance,
doctors in Tennessee and at the Cleveland Clinic performed an exhaustive series
of tests, but were unable to pinpoint a cause or recommend a treatment,
according to news reports.
'Thought
I was going to die'
In
2009, Calvino Inman was shocked by what he saw in his bathroom mirror: blood
streaming from his eyes. "I looked up and saw myself, and I thought I was
going to die," he told CNN. The teenager from Rockwood, Tenn., was
rushed to the local emergency room, but doctors could offer no insights into
the perplexing case. A battery of tests — including a CT scan, an MRI (magnetic
resonance imaging) and an ultrasound — offered no clues.
The
phenomenon of haemolacria has puzzled doctors for centuries. In the 16th
century, Italian physician Antonio Brassavola described a nun who, instead of
menstruating, would bleed from her eyes and ears each month. In 1581, Flemish
doctor Rembert Dodoens examined a 16-year-old girl "who discharged her
flow throughout the eyes, as drops of bloody tears, instead of through the
uterus," according to a 2011 report in the journal The Ocular Surface.
Dr.
Barrett G. Haik, director of the University of Tennessee's Hamilton Eye
Institute in Memphis, co-authored a 2004 review of four known cases of
haemolacria, published in the journal Ophthalmic Plastic & Reconstructive
Surgery. The authors concluded that "bloody tearing is an unusual clinical
entity that concerns patients and can perplex physicians." However, such
"cases typically resolve without treatment."
Indeed,
in each of the four cases reviewed, the patients — one boy and three girls,
ages 6 to 14 — simply stopped weeping blood, and the condition never returned.
Haemolacria can be caused by a head injury or other trauma, but these
cases, like Inman's and Spann's, were idiopathic (of unknown cause). "When
you can't find an origin, you can't eliminate any of the possibilities,"
Haik told CNN.
"Most
of these were relatively young patients," Dr. James Fleming, an
ophthalmologist at the Hamilton Eye Institute and co-author of the 2004 review,
told the Tennessean. "As they matured, the bleeding decreased, subsided
and then stopped."
A
reclusive life
Until
the bleeding stops, Spann — a talented artist who had hoped to pursue a career
in fashion design — is forced to live a reclusive life. "Any job I get, I
lose, because my eyes start bleeding and they can't keep me on," Spann
said. "Obviously, I can't be a waiter and work in any public thing because
you are bleeding."
He
is also forced to live with ridicule: "I have kids that ride by on bikes
in this neighborhood who point and say, 'That's the guy who bleeds,'"
Spann told the Tennessean. "I really don’t want more than that."
Spann has tried to contact Inman to share his ordeal with a fellow sufferer,
but was unable to connect with him.
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