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Woman explains illness online

Woman explains illness online

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Taifa Finlayson was 1 year old when she was diagnosed with juvenile idiopathic arthritis. The autoimmune disease causes her to go blind.

For four years, Taiva Finlayson from Ontario, Canada, couldn’t go outside or go about her daily life because of pain. The reason was something called juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA): an autoimmune disease that the Canadian woman was diagnosed with when she was just one year old. Due to a mismanaged immune system, her joints and skin initially become affected by chronic inflammation. The disease later spread to her eyes, leaving her blind on her right side at the age of 12. On the social media platform TikTok (@taivafinlayson), the young woman explains her condition and lets her followers share her story of suffering.

The immune system attacks the eyes: A young woman went blind and had her eyeball removed

“The infection had damaged the eye so badly that there was no stopping it,” Taifa Finlayson told the British news portal. Need to know. With juvenile idiopathic arthritis, the joints of young children, children and teenagers are usually inflamed at first. This is a relatively rare disease overall (about 4-5 children per 100,000). However, it is the most common chronic inflammatory rheumatic disease in children, affecting boys and girls equally. The causes of autoimmune disease are not yet known. Immune predisposition as well as viral and bacterial infections are suspected as possible triggers.

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A young Canadian woman goes blind due to an autoimmune disease. When her eyeball is removed, she feels better. (Avatar) © Lisa Lederer/IMAGO

When Tavia Finlayson goes blind, her condition begins to deteriorate. If you've been blind for a long time, your eyes can shrink. “It's like grapes turning into raisins,” she explains. Need to know. The TikToker then suffers from severe pain that greatly affects her daily routine and life. She compares the pain the young woman has to endure during this time as: “Like when you get a bad scratch in your eye or when sand irritates your eye – except this happens every day, all day, and in 2023 you will.” She was finally freed from the condition when doctors at St Joseph's Hospital in London surgically removed her right eyeball.

A young woman had her eyeball removed due to an autoimmune disease

The Canadian woman stated that she cries with joy when her doctor refers her to a surgeon. “Because I was so happy and ready to be pain free,” Tavia Finlayson said. Her quality of life really changes after the operation, as she was not only suffering from pain before. “I was very self-conscious about my blind eye before because it looked distorted and discolored. I found it difficult to make eye contact and take a picture. I always tried to cover it.” After successful treatment, you also receive an artificial eye. (GPR)