A few things are simply so astonishing you can't accept they're genuine. A valid example: A 52-year-elderly person in Italy went to the crisis room since wicked tears gushed from the two eyes.

It might appear to be inconceivable, yet crying grisly tears is a totally real, albeit uncommon, therapeutic condition called haemolacria. Cautioning, the photograph is so gross, we're not notwithstanding including it. Be that as it may, the case report and picture are distributed in The New England Journal of Medicine.

As his specialists clarify, the unidentified patient announced precipitously seeping around two hours previously he visited the doctor's facility. The draining endured a few minutes, ceased, at that point began once more. The patient did not have whatever other restorative conditions that could clarify the dying, similar to eye or nasal injury.

In any case, the patient's specialists found hemangiomas, noncancerous tumors caused by having too many veins, as per the American Academy of Ophthalmology. Untreated, these tumors can case lethargic eye, terrible vision, glaucoma, or even vision misfortune. Furthermore, indeed, as this case appears, the tumors can cause unconstrained seeping from the eyes, as per Columbia University.

Specialists recommended eye drops, and the patient revealed no extra ridiculous tears amid a one-year development.

Haemolacria is to a great degree uncommon, and there are no assessments for what number of individuals experience the ill effects of it.

Be that as it may, a few people encounter the draining frequently. As CBS News revealed in 2013, Tennessee occupant Michael Spann said the condition affected his capacity to hold an occupation.

"Any activity I get I lose in light of the fact that my eyes begin draining and they can't keep me on," Spann clarified. "Clearly, I can't be a server and work in any open thing since you are dying."

The draining started when Spann was 22 years of age and at first happened every day except has dwindled to a couple of occurrences seven days with time, CBS detailed.

There is no standard treatment, and as one specialist noted in a survey of four contextual investigations, treatment doesn't appear to be essentially to stop the dying.