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Mel B Just Opened Up About The Health Scare That Left Her Temporarily Blind

Mel B Reveals She Went Temporarily Blind
  • Melanie Brown (a.k.a. Mel B) opened up about a scary health issue she faced last week.
  • In an Instagram post Tuesday morning, Mel B revealed she "went blind" in her right eye and her "left eye went blurry."
  • Mel was later diagnosed with uveitis and iritis-two forms of inflammation in the eyeball.

Melanie Brown-a.k.a. Mel B, a.k.a. Scary Spice -is opening up about a super scary health scare she had last week that caused her to go temporarily blind.

In a new Instagram post shared Tuesday morning, Mel let her fans in on her recent health scare, which forced her to wear an eye patch over her right eye, as seen in her selfie. "Thank you so much for all the lovely support and messages Ive had about my eye," she wrote in the caption. She went on to tell the "real truth" about what truly happened to her eye.

"I had an awful experience last week when I went blind in my right eye and my left eye went blurry," she wrote. "Even though the stupid press said Im ok and this has happened to me many times before, just to be clear I was NOT ok and this has NEVER EVER happened to me before."

In reality, Mel said she was "actually in a lot of pain and very very scared," but thanked doctors and eye specialists at London's Moorfields Hospital and Luton and Dunstable University Hospital for finally helping her get a diagnosis: severe iritis in her right eye and uveitis in her left eye.

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So, according to the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO), uveitis is an inflammation of the middle layer of the eyeball, called the uvea. And Mel B was spot-on with her symptoms, which can develop suddenly and usually cause blurriness, floaters, and light sensitivity.

Though doctors aren't always sure what causes the inflammation, it's tied to smoking, infections like herpes, syphilis, Lyme, and singles, and autoimmune diseases like lupus and rheumatoid arthritis.

Iritis, per the AAO, inflammation of the iris, or the colored part of the eye, and is technically another form of uveitis. Iritis also results from another condition or a genetic predisposition.

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In order to treather uveitis, Mel wrote that she's taking "multiple prescription heavy duty eye drops and other medication" to keep the inflammation in check. Though she anticipates dealing with the inflammation for the next few months (three to four months, to be exact), she said she's no longer worried about permanent damage.

Now that Mel has the condition under control, she says her only problem is getting her hands on "a very cool Scary eye patch." Eye patch designers, take note.

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