Surgically Implanted Eyeball Jewelry Is the New Piercing - East Idaho News

Surgically Implanted Eyeball Jewelry Is the New Piercing

  Published at

ABC eye art ml 131125 16x9 992?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1385467456531Sydney Lupkin/ABC News(NEW YORK) — Lucy Luckayanko was at a night club in New York City when a man approached her and said, “Oh, your eye is so shiny!”
 
“Yeah,” the 25-year-old blonde responded in her native Russian accent. “I’ve got platinum in my eye.”

The platinum heart glimmers from the corner of Luckayanko’s right eye every time she looks up.  Dr. Emil Chynn surgically implanted the eye jewelry a few weeks ago on Park Avenue in Manhattan for $3,000 as local news cameras captured the moment. 

Chynn operated in front of a floor-to-ceiling glass window so passersby could watch from the street.  But Luckayanko didn’t mind.  Chynn said he’d given her a Valium and some laughing gas to calm her nerves.

“You don’t feel anything,” Luckayanko said.

Chynn, whose bread and butter is laser vision correction, used a laser to make a slit in the thin membrane covering the white of Luckayanko’s eye and slipped the curved silvery heart into its pocket.  The slit was so tiny it didn’t even need stitches, he said.

Luckayanko said it felt as if something was in her eye the first few days, but then she caught herself.

“I guess it is something in my eye,” she said.

Hers was the first surgery of its kind in New York, and four other people have contacted Chynn to get eye jewelry, too.

Chynn is no stranger to being in the news.  He made headlines a few years ago for being the “creepy Craigslist doctor” after he posted an ad for a rent-free apartment in Manhattan available to a woman who would walk on his back for an hour a day, feed him and help him find a wife.  His wife search also went viral when an email to a matchmaker got into the wrong hands, which he talks about on his practice’s website.

He sat down next to Luckayanko for an interview with ABC News in the basement of his office as broken fluorescent lights blinked off and on every so often in another room full of surgical supplies.  Chynn’s patient coordinator, Tarek Elnicklawy, called this room “the dungeon.”

After telling Luckayanko to look up, to show off the tiny silver heart — which nearly blends into the white of her eye — Chynn explained that he’d been looking for a patient to get the first SafeSight Eye Jewelry for a number of years.  Luckayanko was perfect, he said.

“She’s Russian. She’s over the top,” he said, adding that he’s had a few Russian girlfriends and claiming matter-of-factly that they would gladly “not eat” to be able to afford designer dresses.

Luckayanko smiled but said nothing.

Chynn said he was hoping for someone who would be attractive enough for the media to take an interest in.  He said he hoped to perform the eye jewelry surgery on a celebrity on live television to prove it was safe.

The American Academy of Ophthalmology disagreed, warning consumers to avoid the surgery, because even though it is more common in Europe, it isn’t approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

“The American Academy of Ophthalmology has not identified sufficient evidence to support the safety or therapeutic value of this procedure,” the academy said in a statement, warning of complications including blindness from ocular infection or bleeding, bleeding beneath the conjunctiva, perforation of the eye and conjunctivitis.

“Tell these people I’m not going to lose my eyeball,” Luckayanko said.

“It’s not possible,” Chynn said. “My life would be better if people listened to me.”

Luckayanko said she likes the eye jewelry because it’s “elegant” and only visible to the people she wants to be close to.  She said she didn’t have any tattoos because she didn’t like that they’re permanent.  The eye jewelry is removable.

“Don’t take a steak knife and remove it yourself,” Chynn said.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

SUBMIT A CORRECTION