craze that's sweeping Japan and causing a surge in eye infections
We've all heard about people doing strange things for love, but Japanese students are taking love-induced madness to a whole new level - and putting their health at risk in the process.
The latest craze sweeping through Japan is ‘oculolinctus’ –
eyeball licking as an expression of affection between young lovers.
It has led to a surge in cases of eye infections, such as conjunctivitis, and can even cause blindness
However, it has led to a surge in cases of eye infections
and can even cause blindness, doctors have warned.
The bizarre
fetish, which is also known as ‘worming’, was uncovered by the Japanese
website, Naver Matome, which revealed that videos of eyeball licking have been
posted on YouTube.
But eyeball licking has not only taken off in Japan.
Elektrika Energias, 29, a student in the U.S. Virgin Islands
told The Huffington Post: ‘My boyfriend started licking my
eyeballs years ago and I just loved it.
‘I'm not with him anymore, but I still like to ask guys to
lick my eyeballs. I just love it because it turns me on, like sucking on my
toes. It makes me feel all tingly.’
However, the practice is not without its dangers – it can
transmit the bacteria which causes conjunctivitis, Medical Daily reports.
If the person doing the eyeball licking has the herpes
virus, that can be passed on as well.
Naver Matome discovered that the craze came to the attention
of one school in Japan when it was noticed that up to ten children in each
class arrived at lessons wearing eye patches.

‘Nothing good can come of this,’ Dr David Granet, a San
Diego ophthalmologist, told The Huffington Post. ‘There are ridges on the
tongue that can cause a corneal abrasion. And if a person hasn't washed out
their mouth, they might put acid from citrus products or spices into the eye.’
Dr Phillip Rizzuto, from the American Academy of
Ophthalmology, added that eyeball licking can cause blindness as the bacteria
found in the mouth can damage eye tissue.
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