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Bee stings through the cornea are relatively rare. With the advent of more aggressive killer bees, this is becoming more common. The pure number of stings during an attack by killer bees make it is more likely the eye will be stung, not because the bees are targeting your eyes. The bee stingers can be retained in the cornea (the clear window of the eye) after an attack. There is no consensus on how to deal with the retained stingers, but if they are causing inflammation or non-healing of the eye they must be removed. We show a video of Dr. Kavanagh removing a stinger from a patient's eye under local anesthetic. Dr. Kavanagh practices at Eye Associates of South Texas with offices in Seguin, San Antonio, New Braunfels, Luling, Gonzales, and Hondo. 830-379-3937. www.eyeassociatesofsouthtexas.com or www.eyestx.com Dr. Kavanagh is fellowship-trained in Glaucoma. Dr. Kavanagh is a board-certified ophthalmologist and clinical assistant professor at University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio Texas, where he has taught many residents cataract and glaucoma surgery. Dr. Kavanagh has performed over 20,000 cataract procedures with intraocular lens implantation. He implants Restor, Technis Multi-Focal (MF), Crystalens, Symfony, Toric IOLs.