Artist painted vile picture of inch-long parasitic worms in his eyes  

Artist paints the stomach-churning inch-long parasitic worms that were living in his eyeballs 

His health had failed him for months, then he saw something wriggling in his eye: Artist paints the stomach-churning inch-long parasitic worms that were living in his eyeballs

  • Ben Taylor, an Australian artist, contracted Loa loa worms after visiting Africa
  • They took months to manifest in his eyes, but grew to be over an inch in length   
  • Doctors later removed one which ‘was wiggling for about a minute before it died’
  • Taylor painted the infection in work now used by the Centre for Disease Control

An artist’s parasitic worm infection has been immortalised in his work.

Ben Taylor, an Australian-born painter who now resides in the UK, was infected with Loa loa filariasis after a visit to rural Gabon, central Africa, in 2013.

Upon returning to Britain, he suffered a strange ‘muscle-snapping’ sensation in his forehead, followed by the emergence of random lumps on his face.

Over the subsequent 12 months he encountered other odd symptoms, such as joint pain, abscesses, gut issues, eye discomfort, fatigue and low mood.

Eyeful: Ben Taylor, an Australian artist, contracted Loa loa worms after visiting Africa in 2013

Bizarrely, he only decided to seek medical attention when he noticed a ‘curved line at the bottom of his eye… that wiggled’.

Upon diagnosis, doctors quickly removed an inch-long worm from the site and admitted him to the Tropical School of Medicine, where he remained for four days.


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There, they also diagnosed him with two other parasites: hookworms and threadworms, which can be contracted via infected earth.

But it was before this grim manifestation – and follow-up treatment – that Taylor was compelled to capture his experience on canvas, before he knew of his infection.  

‘For some reason, I just felt drawn to spend hour upon hour working on this painting with intricate wormlike patterns,’ he told Buzzfeed News. 

Grim: Loa loa filariasis is passed on to humans through the repeated bites of deerflies

Art attack: Ben’s work has been used by the Centre for Disease Control for the cover of their August 2018 medical journal, Emerging Infectious Diseases

‘That painting seems to be influenced by the parasites I was carrying around inside me.’

Fittingly, the image – which he later shared online – was used by the Centre for Disease Control for the cover of their August 2018 medical journal, Emerging Infectious Diseases.  

‘It’s a bit of a weird painting, not everyone’s cup of tea, but my goodness — medical people, they love it,’ said Taylor.

WHAT IS LOA LOA FILARIASIS?

Loiasis, AKA African eye worm, is caused by the parasitic worm

It is passed on to humans through the repeated bites of deerflies (also known as mango flies or mangrove flies) of the genus Chrysops.

The flies that pass on the parasite breed in certain rain forests of West and Central Africa. Infection with the parasite can also cause repeated episodes of itchy swellings of the body known as Calabar swellings.

There may be more than 29 million people who are at risk of getting loaisis in affected areas of Africa.

Source: Centre for Disease Control 

 

 

 

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