
Woman hospitalised with 'bulging' eyes after using cult bargain beauty product
A woman was left with 'bulging eyes' and skin that felt as if it was 'on fire' after using a popular spot-busting treatment.
Neasa McGrattan, from Newcastle upon Tyne, claimed she had been using the Salicylic Acid two per cent Solution serum by budget beauty brand The Ordinary for years before she purchased a new bottle in March.
But a week later the 27-year-old said she noticed a new rash on her forehead and found her eye lids became itchy.
She initially dismissed the symptoms as a sign of stress, but grew concerned after spotting extreme swelling around her eye area, and visited her GP for help.
The doctor prescribed hay fever tablets and told her to stop using any skincare products.
A break from using her much-loved £6 product saw her skin clear up—until she re-applied it.
The following day, she woke up 'terrified', with her face feeling like it was 'on fire' and her eyes having 'doubled' in size, she claimed.
Ms McGrattan said she was rushed to hospital where doctors suggested the serum could be the cause of the reaction.
She has now warned others to patch test every new bottle of cosmetics they buy because 'it's not worth the allergic reaction'.
Recalling her initial symptoms, she said: 'After one week [of using the new bottle] I had quite a small rash in the centre of my forehead, which was similar to a mild sunburn.
'I started getting an itchy eye and eyelids and I got a dry patch to the right of my lower lip. It was similar to psoriasis or eczema, which I'm not prone to.'
The next wave of symptoms that appeared the morning after using the serum were even worse.
'I felt terrified when I woke up because my face was so hot it was on fire and it was burning. I wasn't getting any relief even from ice cubes,' she said.
'My eyes doubled in size and they were puffy. It looked worse than if I'd been beaten up, I could only open my eyes to a slit.'
Hospital doctors told her she was having an allergic reaction and prescribed her antihistamines and eye drops.
Once the swelling went down she claimed she was left with 'aged, red, blotchy and dry skin'.
'It just looked like I had psoriasis on my eyelids, which was terrible.'
She added that doctors told her to 'bin' her bottle of Salicylic Acid as soon as she got home.
As for why she hadn't experienced such an extreme reaction to the product previously, eye specialists suggested a change of formula may have taken place.
'Eye doctors told me that products can get contaminated by other things or maybe it was not sealed correctly,' she added.
The Ordinary website suggests applying the product to a small area first, stating: 'If you develop severe irritation, hives, swelling of eyes and mouth, blistering, or difficulty breathing, rinse off, cease use and consult a physician right away'.
Ms McGrattan advised: 'You should patch test every new bottle that you buy even if you've used that skincare product for a decade.
'I think now every time I buy a new bottle of everything, even if I've used it a million times before, I'm going to patch test every time because it's not worth the reaction I got.'
The Ordinary was approached for a comment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
I was diagnosed with PCOS – and was soon drowning in misinformation
I suspected I had polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) long before it was confirmed. The signs were there: the acne scars that littered my back, the irregular periods, the hair in places on my body that I didn't see on many of my friends. I suspected it from the moment that one of my best friends, who as a girl taught me about bleaching my body hair and waxing my legs, was diagnosed with it as a teenager. Admitting all this publicly feels like an unburdening, but also an invitation to more shame. But I write this because my experience is far from unique. As many as one in 10 women have PCOS, a condition associated with hormonal disturbances that can range from weight gain, 'unwanted' body hair and hair loss, to irregular periods and struggles to conceive children (including an increased risk of miscarriage). It can leave women more likely to develop high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes and heart disease. It is not clear what causes PCOS, but it is known to be passed down generational lines and can be influenced by lifestyle. I was finally diagnosed with PCOS last year, at 30, and have been on a journey to understand what that means ever since. The thing that leaped out at me early on (and has since been uncovered by the BBC) is just how much information, and misinformation, exists around the condition. My Instagram feed is filled with medically unqualified influencers. Sorting through all that to figure out which nutritionists and health professionals to pay attention to, in the absence of adequate support from the doctors and nurses who gave me that initial assessment and diagnosis, has been a battle. I've been encouraged to adopt unrealistic diets (so-called 'PCOS nutritionists' often suggest cutting out gluten, dairy and carbohydrates, despite a lack of evidence to show this is sustainable or useful for the condition); take unregulated supplements that can have significant side-effects; and sign up to expensive health plans and apps. I've been told to stop doing cardio and focus instead on weights and walking, because of the misguided idea that high-intensity exercise will cause my cortisol levels to rise to the degree that it will worsen my symptoms. In reality, all types of exercise can be beneficial. Medical misogyny has been well documented, and women's healthcare is rarely taken seriously. I first asked my GP about symptoms during the pandemic, when, after a blood test, I was told that my hormone levels were normal and I didn't have the condition. Later, having an ultrasound for an unrelated matter, I was unceremoniously told that I had lots of follicles on my ovaries and probably had PCOS. When I mentioned the earlier blood test, the sonographer told me that this is not a good way to diagnose the condition, especially if you are using hormonal birth control. Confusingly, PCOS does not cause cysts on the ovaries. 'They're not actual true cysts,' says Helena Teede, an Australian endocrinologist and expert in PCOS at Monash University in Melbourne. 'They're follicles or eggs that are just developing along a pathway, but they stop developing normally because they don't like the hormones that they're floating around in.' There has long been chatter about renaming PCOS to something that is more representative of the breadth of symptoms it causes. The current name, Teede says, 'completely misses the fact that this is a hormonal condition; that it has long-term impacts; that it is psychological, dermatological, metabolic, reproductive and, beyond fertility, it goes into many other reproductive features. And it really has an impact on quality of life.' She says it's likely that the process to give it a new name will be completed this year – her organisation has opened a survey for anyone who wants to contribute. Another myth is that women with the condition have a significant 'excess' of testosterone. And PCOS does open up some interesting questions about gender. But, says Teede, the idea that testosterone is an exclusively male hormone is false. Plus, women with PCOS do not typically have elevated levels of testosterone; it's more that our bodies are not very good at dealing with it. We have much less of the hormone than most men. After my diagnosis at the ultrasound, I had a follow-up call with a nurse practitioner, where I was told simply that I should put up with my symptoms but come back when I wanted to get pregnant; because, of course, that is the only thing that young women aspire to. When I pushed, I was offered a drug named metformin, which is used to treat insulin resistance and diabetes. It wasn't explained to me how this drug works and why it would be useful for my specific case. But, I have since learned, insulin resistance – when your body struggles to regulate your blood sugar levels – is one of the hallmark symptoms of PCOS and triggers a lot of the other issues that people with the condition face. Teede, however, points out that 'every woman has a different problem and a different life stage that's most important to them, and it's about their interpretation'. Doctors should think holistically about treatment plans for women with PCOS and listen to their concerns. My own contrasting experience, though, is much more common, says Rachel Morman, the chair of the UK PCOS charity Verity: 'After 20 years of doing this work, I'm like: 'Why is this still happening?'' She had a similar conversation with doctors after she was diagnosed in the early 00s, with the added shock of being told that she wouldn't be able to have children at all. While it is true that about 70% of women with PCOS experience fertility struggles, after intervention that number drops significantly; the vast majority of women with the condition are able to get pregnant. Morman has three children now. It's also important for women to know that a lot of the risks associated with PCOS in pregnancy (such as miscarriage, gestational diabetes and pre-eclampsia) are preventable. Before they start trying for a baby, women with the condition should have a full diabetes test and get their blood pressure checked, as well as aim for a healthy diet and active lifestyle. But when doctors tell us that PCOS is something we should be concerned about only if we want to get pregnant, that is extremely frustrating, considering the wide range of effects it has on our bodies. Morman says that while there is a lot more information available now than when she was diagnosed, some treatment options have become worse: hair removal treatments used to be offered on the NHS for women diagnosed with PCOS, but not any more. As Teede acknowledges: 'One of the reasons why people go to alternative sources of information is because they're not satisfied with what they get from the health practitioners.' Misinformation about PCOS abounds, and much of it is repeated by medical professionals. To help counteract this, Teede helped to develop the extensively researched international evidence-based guidelines for PCOS in 2023, which I now regard as the holy grail of information about the condition. Her team has also created an app called AskPCOS, which can help women to find the right treatment pathways. It doesn't cover everything, but it is thorough, uses up-to-date research and doesn't make bold claims about 'curing' PCOS, as some people do on social media. 'There are a whole lot of individual practitioners, most of whom are not actually practitioners, who are there for financial gain,' says Teede. 'The biggest challenge I have is the misinformation, and then associated with that, the harm that's done by denigrating actual evidence-based strategies. Which, in the end, does a disservice for women with the condition.' She is not wholly against what she terms 'complementary therapies' (ie supplements and diets), as long as women undertake them clear-eyed and unswayed by false claims. But she does not believe people will stop looking to these types of practitioners for support until there are more trustworthy medical repositories, alongside legal liability for people who provide misinformation. Having researched PCOS over the past year (though there's still much to learn), here's what I've tried: in terms of monitoring the metabolic symptoms, I've checked my blood pressure and had screenings for diabetes and high cholesterol. My levels were fine. I've come off my birth control (some types of pill can help with the symptoms of PCOS; this one didn't) and started taking a well-researched supplement called myo-inositol, which may help with insulin resistance. But I've since come off it because it made me dizzy, a known side-effect for some people. I get periods most months, though I did so before I was put on the pill in my teens, so this may not have affected my ovulation. In terms of cosmetic treatments, I have moved away from laser hair removal, which can cause women with PCOS to experience paradoxical hypertrichosis – the regrowth of darker hairs, seemingly stimulated by the laser. Instead, I have begun electrolysis, the only way to permanently remove hairs. I'm on a break from it as the treatment has been slow and moderately painful, causing breakouts that take weeks to heal. Thankfully, the acne on my face has never been severe, but I have got topical treatment for it from an online dermatologist and benzoyl peroxide from my GP. My body acne has taken longer to get under control; I had a private online consultation with a dermatologist, which cost me £100, and have found reasonably priced skincare products that mostly work for me (shout out to Cerave). The reason I am sharing this is not so that others with PCOS can attempt to mirror my journey. Everyone is different. For example, some women are comfortable with having visible facial hair. It is not inherently shameful and I hate that it is considered to be so. Instead, I am sharing because it shows how much time and energy I have had to put into dealing with PCOS. As it stands, all women with the condition need to go on a journey of evidence-based self-education, because it is unlikely that their primary care doctors will be able to adequately direct them, and there are very few accessible specialists. We have to test out treatments and cosmetic procedures – many unregulated – for ourselves, working through trial and error. Perhaps one of the biggest learnings I've taken from this year has been around mental expenditure. While we undoubtedly have to demand better treatment from our doctors, and ask them to seek out research, those of us with chronic conditions have personal choices to make. Even in an ideal system, where I could be supported on and off medication with all the necessary tests, I would still have to make a judgment call about how much time and energy to invest in 'managing' my PCOS. It is lifelong and incurable, and, for me at least, learning to live with it has become just as important as tackling some of the issues that it causes. That is not to say people with PCOS should give up – learn to embrace their facial hair or uncomfortable acne, or the more serious difficulties related to heart health or diabetes – but it does move it in my mind from a space of hopelessness to one of pragmatism. And it has allowed me to give myself a mental break. 'You do need to have at least four periods a year, because otherwise it's a higher risk of getting cancer of the womb, for example,' says Teede. She says that people with PCOS must go for an annual checkup, including blood pressure tests. 'But you don't need to carry that around permanently,' she adds. The other brilliant news is that, in the background, things are changing. A new study shows that awareness of the syndrome has grown massively in the past eight years. In the UK, there is collaborative work happening to make sure that the syndrome becomes a research priority, including an all-party parliamentary group. 'We'll actually have proper pathways for PCOS treatment, so hopefully that should improve standard of care,' says Morman. For me, I had my foray into the land of misinformation and I battled my way out of it. I have sought out community with other women who have the condition, and I'm taking steps to mitigate its potential effect on my fertility in the future. Most of all, I feel incredibly thankful that I have been diagnosed in an era where there are women like Teede and Morman who are fighting for the recognition and evidence-based treatment of PCOS. We are not at a loss. We are at the bright beginning.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Popular brand wows fans with celebrity-approved beauty buy that's 'great for sensitive rosacea skin' (even Hailey Bieber is obsessed)
Get those beach bags ready because summer is here! SPF is the one daily beauty step you can not skip out on, so finding the right one is a top priority. SPF is the one daily beauty step you can not skip out on, so finding the right one is a top priority. After doing our research, there is one clear top runner that stands out as best in the show, the EltaMD viral face sunblock. EltaMD | Cult-Classic SPF Summer is here, and that means so are those powerful UV rays that we love but our skin hates. This summer, protecting your skin is in, and we found the absolute best sunscreens on the block — EltaMD. Shop the brand's cult-classic options on Amazon for under $50 ASAP ahead of the sunny days ahead. Shop EltaMD UV Clear Face Sunscreen SPF 46 $44 Fifteen years of bringing customers the best SPF, and there is no end in sight! Join the masses of consumer and celebrity fans who swear by the sheer EltaMD formula in protecting your skin 24/7. Recommended by dermatologists and clinically tested, this skincare is viral for a reason. Shop EltaMD UV Clear Tinted Broad-Spectrum 46 $44 The same but better! All the things you loved about the original UV Clear but with a tint twist. Available in Tinted, Untinted and Deep Tinted — helps even out skin tone and leaves a beautiful glow all day long with no white cast. Shop All-day UV protection with 40 SPF and sheer shine to give your skin a powerful lift EltaMD has wowed users for generations, and with its cult-classic suncreens, the UV Clear Broad-Spectrum SPF 46 and EltaMD UV Daily SPF 40 Tinted. On Amazon, where the SPF's have racked up thousands of five star reviews once fan explained how it's 'great for sensitive rosacea skin'. And the $44 face lotion SPF is reported to work so well even celebrities, such as Hailey Bieber and Sydney Sweeney, swear by it as one of their skincare ' must-haves.' SPF is having its moment, and we are here for it. When it comes to protecting your skin, sunscreen is the first step. Harsh UV rays and Blue Light can cause wrinkles, fine lines, and dark spots, but by using a daily face sunscreen, you can combat and prevent these negative side effects. The EltaMD UV Clear Broad-Spectrum SPF 46 was formulated with your skin's long-term protection in mind. Each bottle contains 5 percent Niacinamide that actively reduces blemishes during wear and SPF 46 to block out powerful light. Designed for all skin types and shades! Choose which EltaMD SPF works for you with Zinc Oxide 24/7 protection The list of ingredients also includes other helpful naturally sourced actives, including Vitamin E and Hyaluronic Acid. Don't trust us? Trust the dermatologists! EltaMD is backed by dermatologists everywhere, with all their products tested rigorously to pass dermatology standards. Users attest to this, with one saying: 'My dermatologist recommended this as I have rosacea and I adore it. Since using it I've even seen improvement in fine lines... and my rosacea flares have improved!' If you are looking for a little extra shine with all the same protection, then the EltaMD UV Clear Tinted Broad-Spectrum 46 is for you. Available in two shades and designed to give your skin an effortless sunkissed glow all day long, you will not be disappointed. Users are raving about their glow, with one saying: 'Perfect for sensitive skin like me who has rosacea. It doesn't leave any white scar, easy to blend and the glow is amazing!' So what are you waiting for?! Snatch up this celebrity-approved skincare hack ahead of the hot days of summer on Amazon ASAP.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
I'm a pet expert, these are the common garden essentials that could be KILLING your dog, you must act now
WITH the UK enjoying hot weather this weekend, plenty of us will be spending more time outside in our garden. And as much as we want our furry friends to join us, dog owners are being warned of the potentially fatal things lurking on your plot. 1 Many people spend more time gardening in the summer, using fertiliser to help their gardens bloom. But as Ross Hallifax, from pet insurance specialist Purely Pets, explains: 'Not only can dogs experience skin and foot irritation if they walk on fertiliser, but it can cause stomach upset if ingested due to its toxic ingredients like nitrogen and phosphorus.' But it's not just fertiliser that can cause a problem for our pooches. Used to help control unwanted garden visitors, both dry and wet pesticides can also be dangerous to your dog and irritate their skin and digestive system if consumed. Snail and slug bait can also be highly toxic and if consumed, can cause severe tremors. And for those refreshing their garden shed or outdoor space this summer, be careful of paint. Both the fumes released during painting, and the product itself, can be toxic to our pets due to its high-chemical content. If you suspect your dog has ingested something they shouldn't have, look out for signs of vomiting, diarrhoea, hyperactivity or restlessness, tremors, seizures, or fits, or blood in the stool. Ross adds: 'If you suspect your dog has been exposed to any of these toxins, try to call your vet immediately and explain what's happened so they can help identify the best course of treatment.' Vet Dr Sarah-Jane Molier previously warned dog owners over fake grass as it can absorb heat, making it more likely a pup could be hurt. How to keep pets safe during a heatwave Dr Sarah-Jane Molier told Pets Radar: "Tarmac, asphalt and fake grass are the most common culprits. "They absorb heat throughout the day and retain it well, meaning they stay hot for quite some time." It may not always easy to tell when your dog has injured itself. Owners should look out for any limping or resting of one leg that switches between the two. Vet Dr. Rachel Siu reveals the 5 dogs she'd never own By Marsha O'Mahony HUSKY Beautiful, intelligent, and super-active, like a Border Collie, a Husky is a working dog and likes to keep busy. If you lead a sedentary life, then this guy is not for you, and you are not for him. It should be no surprise that Huskies love the cold - look at that coat of fur. So, living in 110 degrees in Texas is pretty grim for these dogs. DACHSHUND Adorable, cute, funny, and they can be very expensive. The basic physiology of these sausage dogs does them no favours. "Because of their long backs, they're really prone to intervertebral disc disease," said Dr. Rachel. You would be wise to keep a pot of money aside just in case because back surgery is likely to be expensive. GREAT DANE These lolloping, loving, and gregarious dogs are "goofballs." But they have short lifespans, developing health issues early on in life. Prepare yourself for heartbreak. DOODLE These are the current "it" dog, they are everywhere. They can be mixed with pretty much any other breed. Their popularity has soared in recent years, with pet owners attracted to their low maintenance and hypoallergenic qualities. But this couldn't be further from the truth, said our vet. "These dogs are often mixed with shedding dogs so they do shed and they also need grooming very frequently," she wrote. Their temperament is unpredictable and she has seen some that are wonderful to work with and others who have serious behavioral problems. BULLDOGS These guys are adorable but they have serious respiratory problems. Genetics are not on the side of any brachycephalic dog. "I just would not own them," she said. "They're just not a healthy breed. They struggle to breathe with their smooshed faces." Like the Dachshund, they also suffer from intervertebral disc disease. If your canine companion doesn't get excited for going on a walk, it could also be a sign. They will often lick or chew their wounded paws, and be hesitant to let you touch them. Some more obvious signs include patchy discolouration on the pads as well as blisters and peeling. If you think your dog has burned paws, take them to the vet.