
A 22-year-old Armenian woman who supposedly cries up to 50 
jagged-edged crystal tears every day has been accused of faking her 
“biochemically and anatomically impossible” condition by placing glass 
shards in her eye sockets.
For most people, crying is the result of great pain or suffering, but
 for Satenik Kazaryan, a young woman from the Armenian village of 
Spandaryan, the act of crying itself is a source of excruciating pain. 
That’s because she allegedly cries solid crystal tears with jagged edges
 that scratch her eyes as they come out of the eye sockets. The 
22-year-old first started crying crystal tears a few days ago, while 
visiting a dentist. It felt kike sand had gotten in her eye, and when 
she went to visit an ophthalmologist about it, the doctor extracted 
several crystals from her eye. Since then, her life has become a living 
hell, as she claims to cry around 50 crystals a day.
All the doctors are in shock,” Kazaryan told Armenian TV channel 
Mir24. “They have not encountered such a disease and do not know how to 
treat it. They have not even diagnosed it.”
At first doctors didn’t even want to examine the young woman, 
thinking that she was faking her condition, but now people aren’t so 
sure. Video evidence of glass-like crystal being extracted from her eyes
 have gone viral online, and some solid tears have been sent to a lab 
for analysis. Armenian deputy health minister Oganes Arutyunyan has come
 out with a statement, saying that Satenik Kazaryan’s condition is being
 investigated in order to figure out a way to help her.
Russian ophthalmologist Tatyana Shilova said that the formation of 
such crystals in the human body is theoretically possible if a person’s 
body composition changes, like if the level of salt rose drastically. 
However, she added that the person would most likely suffer serious 
heart or brain issues before experiencing this kind of bizarre symptoms.

Dr. Ivan Schwab, a professor of ophthalmology at the University of 
California Davis School of Medicine, told Insider that he believes 
Kazaryan’s to be impossible.
“I’m not claiming absolute knowledge of this, but I’ve never seen 
anything like this in my 30-plus years as ophthalmologist. I don’t see 
how this could happen biochemically or anatomically,” he said.
A couple of days ago, Armenian media outlets started reporting that 
Satenik Kazaryan may be suffering from Munchausen syndrome, a type of 
mental disorder that pushes people to fake serious illnesses for 
attention. Professor Anna Hovakimyan, of the Armenian Republican 
Ophthalmological Centre, was one of the medical professionals who 
claimed Munchausen was a likely explanation, adding that the crystals 
collected from the woman’s eyes looked like normal glass shards.
ATV crew from Russian station NTV took some of Kazaryan’s tears to 
gemologist Olga Radionova who said they were “simple glass”. The team 
later reported that people in the 22-year-old’s village told them that 
she started crying the bizarre tears after her five-year-old son, Vanik,
 broke a glass vase and a shard got in her eye.
Satenik Kazaryan and her mother-in-law continue to claim that the 
tears are genuine, and the Armenian health ministry is still 
investigating the case.
Interestingly, this sin’t the first time we’ve heard of people crying
 solid tears. Back in 2015 we wrote about Laura Ponce, a Brazilian woman
 who claimed to have been crying crystal tears for 20 years, and two years ago we featured the case of Manasi, a young Indian girl who allegedly cried small white pebbles every day.

 
							     
							     
							     
							     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

