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Taiwanese Woman Who Went Tomb-Sweeping Came Home With 4 Live Bees In Her Eyes

Sweat bees are not known to attack, so doctors believe they had simply gotten stuck.

A Taiwanese woman who was suffering from swollen eyes, after tomb-sweeping duties during Qing Ming, was found to have four live bees in her eyes

Dr Hong (right).

Image via Apple Daily Newspaper/ABC News

BBC reported that the 28-year-old woman had been pulling out weeds near her ancestors' graves when some insects flew into her left eye.

She had assumed it was just dirt that entered her eyes.

The victim's eye began to swell up and she was in pain hours after the Qing Ming visit, so she sought treatment at a hospital

Warning: the following photos contain elements that may be distressing.

Image via Hong Chi Ting/BBC

"She couldn't completely close her eyes. I looked into the gap with a microscope and saw something black that looked like an insect leg," Dr Hong Chi Ting of Fooyin University Hospital told BBC.

"I grabbed the leg and very slowly took one out, then I saw another one, and another and another. They were still intact and all alive."

Image via Hong Chi Ting/BBC

Dr Hong added that the woman had also saved herself from going blind by not rubbing her eyes.

"She was wearing contact lenses so she didn't dare rub her eyes in case she broke the lens. If she did she could have induced the bees to produce venom... she could have gone blind," he explained.

However, the insects - commonly known as sweat bees - are not known to attack people

Dr Hong told BBC that the bees could have been blown into the woman's eye and gotten stuck there.

"These bees don't usually attack people but they like drinking sweat, hence [the] name," he added.

A sweat bee.

Image via Missouri Department of Conservation/ABC News

In a report by South China Morning Post, Dr Hong also noted that the sweat bees commonly nest in mountains and near graves, which is how the woman came into contact with them.

The patient is expected to make a full recovery, while the bees have been sent to an organisation for studies to be carried out.

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