no, but it can cause damage to the retinaCan light from a light bulb permanently fade or change eye color if it is to close to the eye?
No. The colour of your eyes depends on the pigments in your iris. The light from a lightbulb cannot change this.
Where on earth did you hear such a thing?Can light from a light bulb permanently fade or change eye color if it is to close to the eye?
Medical research on the effects of excessive light on the human body suggests that a variety of adverse health effects may be caused by light pollution or excessive light exposure, and some lighting design textbooks use human health as an explicit criterion for proper interior lighting. Health effects of over-illumination or improper spectral composition of light may include: increased headache incidence, worker fatigue, medically defined stress, decrease in sexual function and increase in anxiety
Common levels of fluorescent lighting in offices are sufficient to elevate blood pressure by about eight points. There is some evidence that lengthy daily exposure to moderately high lighting leads to diminished sexual performance. Specifically within the USA, there is evidence that levels of light in most office environments lead to increased stress as well as increased worker errors. However, such high interior lighting levels are not typical outside.
Several published studies also suggest a link between exposure to light at night and risk of breast cancer, due to suppression of the normal nocturnal production of melatonin.
ultraviolet radiation,may damage the eye(burning)like as if you stared at the sun.Doing this could burn your optical nerves,I dont think light could have a permanent change in the pigmentation of the eye,but black light or reflective light can change the hue of the iris temporarily.
No, but it can permanently damage your eyes!!
Only if it makes you go completely blind, as all completely blind people have the same color eyes, and anyone with even a little vision will not have this color of eye.
Basically it depends on the color and sightedness of the donor eye to replace the damage done by performing such a stunt
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