SurfWax News Index  |  Track News  |  Save/Exchange Information |  About Us

    News and Articles on Ophthalmology

    Archives: Ophthalmology

    Errors in Surgical Procedures Persist  Nov 21, 2009
    The most adverse event reports were in ophthalmology and invasive radiology (21 ... Orthopedics accounted for the second highest rate of problems in the operating room, after ophthalmology. (MEDLINEplus)

    Specialized veterinary care: At what point? And at what price?  Nov 20, 2009
    Specialized veterinary care: At what point. Specialized veterinary care: At what point. (USA Today -- Life)

    Sisters of Charity host wine tasting event at Wellesley Country Club on Nov. 21  Nov 18, 2009
    Fischer s professional affiliations include the American Medical Association, American Academy of Ophthalmology, American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgeons, Massachusetts Medical Society and Massachusetts Eye Physicians and Surgeons. In her local practice, Dr. Fischer has taken care of many of the Sisters of Charity over the years. (Wellesley Townsman, MA)

    Surgical Errors Remain a Challenge in and out of the Operating Room  Nov 18, 2009
    "When examining adverse events only, ophthalmology and invasive radiology were the specialties associated with the most reports (45 [21.2 percent] each), whereas orthopedics was second to ophthalmology for the number of reported adverse events occurring in the operating room," the authors write. "Pulmonary medicine cases (such as wrong-side thoracentesis [removing fluid from chest]) and wrong-site cases (such as wrong spinal level) were associated with the most harm. The most common root cause... (Science Daily)

    Ophthalmic swings to a Q3 profit  Nov 18, 2009
    Two new products a portable diagnostic camera called the OIS EyeScan captures images of both the anterior and posterior segment of the eye and a digital reporter that adds subjective information and numeric data from other devices into the procedure were introduced at the American Academy of Ophthalmology s annual meeting last month. The OIS EyeScan is currently going through U.S. Food and Drug Administration review for market approval. (Sacramento Business Journal, CA)

    Finding a Protective Mechanism for Retinal Cells Could Save Sight  Nov 17, 2009
    17, 2009) Determining what triggers the death of retinal cells, called photoreceptors, could hold the key to stopping blinding disorders caused by a wide range of eye diseases, Yale School of Medicine researchers report in the November journal Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science ... Caroline Zeiss, associate professor of comparative medicine and ophthalmology at Yale School of Medicine, and her colleagues sought to identify a mechanism in photoreceptors that could be targeted to prolong... (Science Daily)

    Surgery in Ancient India  Nov 17, 2009
    The Samhita is divided into into six sections that covering all the branches of medicine - including toxicology, hygiene, midwifery, ophthalmology, psychosomatic ailments and materiamedica. Susruta (nor surprisingly. (Suite101.com)

    Cool Machines: The auto refractor  Nov 17, 2009
    Ophthalmologist Dan Benson, with Benson and Smith Ophthalmology in Klamath Falls, has been using auto refractor technology for about 25 years ... The auto refractor, a machine used by Benson and Smith Ophthalmology in Klamath Falls, can determine why. (Klamath Falls Herald & News, OR)

    Many People With Hemianopia Have Difficulty Detecting Pedestrians While Driving  Nov 16, 2009
    These results, published in the November 2009 issue of Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science, fly in the face of some recent on-road studies that have found most people with hemianopia safe to drive. See Also. (Science Daily)

    Cataract Surgery Doesn't Worsen AMD  Nov 14, 2009
    In the latest issue of the Archives of Ophthalmology, Dr. Neil M. Bressler from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, and colleagues describe the outcomes of cataract surgery performed on 86 eyes with AMD from 86 elderly patients ... SOURCE: Archives of Ophthalmology November 2009. (Newsmax)

    Lack Of VEGF Can Cause Defects Similar To Dry Macular Degeneration  Nov 13, 2009
    3, 2006) Passive smoking almost doubles the risk of the progressively degenerative eye disease, age related macular degeneration, shows research in the British Journal of Ophthalmology. The macula lies at. (Science Daily)

    Laser Surgery Does Not Appear To Have Long-term Effects On Corneal Cells  Nov 13, 2009
    12, 2009) Laser eye surgery to correct vision problems does not appear to be associated with lasting changes to cells lining the inside of the cornea at nine years after the procedure, according to a report in the November issue of Archives of Ophthalmology, one of the JAMA/Archives journals ... Archives of Ophthalmology, 2009; 127 (11): 1423 DOI. (Science Daily)

    Laser Eye Surgery Safe Long-Term  Nov 13, 2009
    The study findings are published in the November issue of the journal Archives of Ophthalmology. "Our results support the findings of numerous short-term studies that found no significant endothelial cell loss after Lasik and PRK," wrote Drs. (MEDLINEplus)

    Cataract Surgery Doesn't Worsen Macular Degeneration  Nov 11, 2009
    The study results are published in the November issue of the journal Archives of Ophthalmology. SOURCE: JAMA/Archives journals, news release, Nov. 9, 2009. (MEDLINEplus)

    Expectant moms, babies subjects of new Singapore study to prevent obesity and diabetes in adults  Nov 10, 2009
    " The prevalence rate of type 2 diabetes mellitus in Singapore is one of the highest in the world and has increased dramatically over the past three decades, from 1.9% of adults in 1975 to 8.2% in 2004. The prevalence of obesity is also rising in Singapore and increased from 5.1% of adults in 1992 to 6.9% in 2004 with almost double the prevalence of school children at over 12%. ### MEDIA CONTACTS: Dawn Sim Manager, NUHS Communications Tel: 6516 1954, Email: Peh Lay Koon Assistant Manager, NUHS... (EurekAlert!)

    Pfizer says cuts will spare La Jolla labs Pfizer's La Jolla laboratories will emerge largely unscathed from a restructuring the company announced yesterday that includes the closure of six research facilities and ...  Nov 10, 2009
    The La Jolla laboratories have been Pfizer's center for research on cancer, vaccines and ophthalmology since a 2007 reorganization in which some programs were transferred to other sites. Aside from La Jolla, the primary research centers will include a large Wyeth lab in Cambridge, Mass. (San Diego Union-Tribune)

    New Way To Attack Inflammation In Graves' Eye Disease  Nov 8, 2009
    D., an oculoplastics specialist who recently joined the faculty of the U-M Kellogg Eye Center, reports on the potential of the drug in the online October issue of Ophthalmology ... Collaborating with Terry J. Smith, M.D., the Frederick G.L. Huetwell Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Douglas has helped to explain the process by which the immune system attacks the orbital tissue in Graves' eye disease ... Ophthalmology, 2009; DOI. (Science Daily)

    Researchers find new way to attack inflammation in Graves' eye disease  Nov 7, 2009
    D., an oculoplastics specialist who recently joined the faculty of the U-M Kellogg Eye Center, reports on the potential of the drug in the online October issue of Ophthalmology ... Collaborating with Terry J. Smith, M.D., the Frederick G.L. Huetwell Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Douglas has helped to explain the process by which the immune system attacks the orbital tissue in Graves' eye disease ... Reference: Rituximab treatment of patients with severe,... (EurekAlert!)

    * Champagne goggles fad makes baseball fans groan  Nov 5, 2009
    Champagne has a high alcohol content, high enough to damage the surface lining of the cornea, said Dr Matthew Gardiner, director of emergency ophthalmology services at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary. A corneal abrasion like that usually heals within two to three days, but it can be extremely painful while its healing, Gardiner said. (Taipei Times, Taiwan -- World Business)

    'Champagne goggles' make fans gag Yankees looked like swimmers with anti-bubbbly eye wear  Nov 4, 2009
    Champagne has a high alcohol content, high enough to damage the surface lining of the cornea, says Dr. Matthew Gardiner, director of emergency ophthalmology services at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary. (For those medically inclined, the lining is called the epithelium. (San Diego Union-Tribune)

    Giving sight by therapy with genes  Nov 3, 2009
    Dr. Jean Bennett, an ophthalmology professor at University of Pennsylvania who was a leader of the study, said participants could read signs or see numbers on their cellphones, stripes on their clothes, patterns on furniture, wood on a violin or marble on a table. Some read several more lines on eye charts. (India Times, India)

    Cataract surgery helps AMD patients; steroid improves DME; online eye health forum  Nov 2, 2009
    Research highlights, 2009 Ophthalmology journal. SAN FRANCISCO, CA--- This month's Ophthalmology, the journal of the American Academy of Ophthalmology (Academy) reports on a national study that finds cataract surgery is likely to benefit patients with age-related macular degeneration (AMD) at all stages of the disease, on a clinical trial showing that the steroid triamcinolone may be effective in advanced diabetic macular edema (DME) patients when standard treatment fails, and on the public's... (EurekAlert!)

    Sight gone, but not necessarily lost?  Oct 31, 2009
    D., a professor of molecular biology and genetics, neuroscience and ophthalmology at Johns Hopkins and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. "It suggests that neurons in the retina can survive for an extended period of time even though they have been functionally silenced.". (EurekAlert!)

    Sanofi Sees Profit Gain From Swine Flu as Generic Competition Erodes Sales  Oct 31, 2009
    The pace of acquisitions will probably continue as the company seeks to further expand in emerging markets and areas such as ophthalmology, Viehbacher said today on a conference call. At the same time, a major acquisition is not on the radar screen, he said. (Bloomberg -- Europe)

    'Moonlighting' Molecules: New Gene Control  Oct 30, 2009
    D., an assistant professor of ophthalmology at Hopkins. "But we only looked at about a fifth of all the proteins in the human genome -- there could be hundreds, even thousands more of these unconventional transcription factors that we don't yet know about.". (Science Daily)

    Focusing on the Top 11 Eye Myths  Oct 28, 2009
    "Squinting is an attempt to make the pupil smaller -- it lets in less light," said Dr. Richard Rosen, director of ophthalmology research at New York Eye and Ear Infirmary. "By closing your lids together it further enhances your focus.". (ABC News)

    Is It A Visual Problem Or Alzheimer's? New Data Helps Doctors Make The Diagnosis  Oct 27, 2009
    Their study -- presented at the 2009 Joint Meeting of the American Academy of Ophthalmology and the Pan-American Association of Ophthalmology (PAAO) -- describes clinical clues that may improve ophthalmologists' ability to detect VVAD and refer patients for further tests. When patients receive neurological assessment, treatment and family counseling early in the disease, outcomes may be better for all concerned. (Science Daily)

    Gene therapy experiment restores sight in a few  Oct 27, 2009
    Twelve treated patients, including Corey, now have better vision, their doctors told a joint meeting of the American Academy of Ophthalmology and Pan-American Association of Ophthalmology in San Francisco on Saturday. advertisement. (MSNBC -- Health)

    Clues to visual variant Alzheimer's; myopia and diabetic retinopathy risk  Oct 26, 2009
    SAN FRANCISCO Two studies are of particular note in today's Scientific Program of the 2009 Joint Meeting of the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO) and the Pan-American Association of Ophthalmology (PAAO): a report by Swiss neuro-ophthalmic researchers about vision exam clues that should make ophthalmologists suspect an atypical variant of Alzheimer's disease; and new evidence from a Singapore National Eye Center study that diabetics who are nearsighted may be less susceptible to diabetic... (EurekAlert!)

    37-year-old doctor dies in diving accident in Malaysia  Oct 26, 2009
    " onclick="Next();" src="/images/butt_next (Channelnewsasia.com)

    Does Nearsightedness Reduce The Risk Of Diabetic Retinopathy?  Oct 26, 2009
    Dr. Lim's study -- presented at the 2009 Joint Meeting of the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO) and the Pan-American Association of Ophthalmology (PAAO) -- is the first to include axial length (AL, measured from the front to back of the eye) in an analysis of the myopia-DR relationship. About 10 percent of people with diabetes develop DR, which damages the eye's retina, the specialized tissue where images are focused for relay to the brain's visual cortex. (Science Daily)

    Read the story  Oct 26, 2009
    "These studies represent a triumph for gene therapy and for modern medicine, and they give hope to other patients with the same or similar blinding diseases for which there has been absolutely no treatment," says Johns Hopkins University professor of ophthalmology Morton F. Goldberg, MD, who was not involved with the research. Gene Therapy For Blindness. (CBS News -- Evening News)

    Treating ROP in tiny preemies; better glaucoma follow-up in urban clinic  Oct 26, 2009
    SAN FRANCISCO Highlights of today's Scientific Program of the 2009 American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO) - Pan-American Association of Ophthalmology (PAAO) Joint Meeting include: John T. Flynn, MD, Columbia University School of Medicine, discussing the ever-tougher challenges Eye M.D.s face in caring for the vision of the tiniest premature babies; and a report by Bradford W. Lee, MD, Stanford University School of Medicine, on barriers to glaucoma follow-up as perceived by patients in an... (EurekAlert!)

    Gene Therapy Restores Vision in Blind Children  Oct 26, 2009
    While the 8-year-old boy was the clearest success story, all the children with a condition known as Leber's congenital amaurosis treated in the study regained sufficient vision to walk unaided, Dr. Jean Bennett of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and colleagues reported at the American Academy of Ophthalmology on Saturday. Younger patients appeared to respond best to the treatment, which involves injecting the eye with genetic material "piggybacked" on a virus, the researchers... (ABC News)

    1 shot of gene therapy and children with congenital blindness can now see  Oct 25, 2009
    D., F.M. Kirby professor of Ophthalmology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine ... "Children who were treated with gene therapy are now able to walk and play just like any normally sighted child," said co-first author Albert M. Maguire, M.D., an associate professor of Ophthalmology at Penn and a physician at Children's Hospital ... Five patients enrolled in the study were identified at the Department of Ophthalmology at the Second University of Naples, an institution with a... (EurekAlert!)

    Eye gene therapy boost for young  Oct 25, 2009
    Gene therapy has already been successfully deployed in the eyes by a team at the Institute of Ophthalmology and Moorfields Eye Hospital in London ... Professor Robin Ali of the UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, who has led the British trials, said the latest study was "very encouraging". (BBC News -- Health)

    Active lifestyle requires active approach to eye health  Oct 24, 2009
    In fact, more than 40,000 people suffer sport-related eye injuries each year, according to the American Academy of Ophthalmology. Dr. Jason Schmit, National Director of Optometry for LasikPlus, offers a few tips for while engaging in the sports and exercise you enjoy. (Ontario Argus Observer, OR)

    The brightest shoot, score and leave  Oct 24, 2009
    He will soon finish his PhD and hopes to get into an ophthalmology program, but after a decade of studying, he does not remember doing his HSC.. At that stage it was the biggest thing in my life, whereas now, looking back, it was important but it wasn't the biggest thing. (Sydney Morning Herald -- Australia)

    UNMC Team 'Reprograms' Body Cells  Oct 23, 2009
    D., a professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences, said the reprogrammed cells will help replace or restore cells lost to disease. The research is the first to show that regular body cells can be transformed into a special kind of stem cell simply through the microenvironment in which the sampled cells are cultured, according to UNMC.. (7 KETV Omaha)

    Can we 'learn to see?': Study shows perception of invisible stimuli improves with training  Oct 22, 2009
    A new study in the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology's Journal of Vision reveals that our brains can be trained to consciously see stimuli that would normally be invisible ... It is published by the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology ... The Association encourages and assists research, training, publication and dissemination of knowledge in vision and ophthalmology. (EurekAlert!)

    Pfizer profit jumps 26% on cost cutting  Oct 21, 2009
    Those include Pfizer's pain treatment Celebrex, blood pressure treatment Norvasc ophthalmology drug Xalatan and Wyeth blockbusters including antidepressant Effexor, children's pneumococcal vaccine Prevnar and Enbrel, a biotech drug for rheumatoid arthritis. Revenue and costs from Wyeth were not included in Tuesday's earnings report. (USA Today -- Money)

    Today's Type 1 Diabetes Patients Enjoy Better Vision Than Those In Decades Past  Oct 17, 2009
    Ronald Klein, MD, MPH, and colleagues at the University of Wisconsin Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences assessed visual acuity over 25 years in 955 people diagnosed with T1D in one of four time periods, with the earliest defined as "before 1960" and the latest as "1975 through 1979." ... This research was published in the October issue of Ophthalmology. (Science Daily)

    FDA to Study Negative Effects of Lasik Eye Surgery  Oct 16, 2009
    Ophthalmology societies report that about 95 percent of patients are satisfied with their new vision. But a small number of patients have reported permanent damage to their eyes following the surgery, including double vision, dry eye and halos around objects at night. (ABC News -- Wire)

    A case in point: Significance of medical case reports grows  Oct 16, 2009
    Professor Michael Kidd from Flinders University in Australia and Editor-in-Chief of JMCR said: "It's great to be back with BioMed Central. We have published many landmark clinical cases across all areas of medicine including cancer, ophthalmology, primary care, gastroenterology, infectious diseases, and musculoskeletal disorders that have significantly contributed to medical knowledge." These cases can often serve as early warning signals for the adverse effects of new medications, or the... (EurekAlert! -- Business News)

    Bioluminescence Imaging Used For Eye Cancer Detection  Oct 15, 2009
    A study detailed in the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology's peer-reviewed Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science ("Non-invasive visualization of retinoblastoma growth and metastasis via bioluminescence imaging") shows how the researchers, led by Qian Huang, MD, PhD, of the First People's Hospital in Shanghai, China, were able to effectively create human eye tumors in mice using particular genes to label eye cancer. BLI was then performed on the mice using the NightOwl LB... (Science Daily)

    How Humans See In Bright And Low Light  Oct 14, 2009
    D., assistant professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences. Pigments in cones, by contrast, quickly regenerated and continued to detect light even without the pigment epithelium, so it was clear a second pathway was involved. (Science Daily)

    Poor Vision Linked to Shorter Lifespan  Oct 14, 2009
    The most likely possible tie between poor vision and death is trouble walking, according to the study in the Archives of Ophthalmology. The researchers speculate that the elderly who don't see well not only might fall more but also may be less likely to visit a doctor regularly or to have prescriptions filled. (Newsmax)

    Delta Dental provision in Senate health bill  Oct 14, 2009
    Which means if your kids' eye care is presently covered by VSP or one of the other eye care stand-alones, you may have to switch to an all-purpose medical insurer, an option the American Optometric Association and the American Academy of Ophthalmology lobbied hard for. That may or may not be the better option, but it does call into question President Obama's assurance, "If you have your plan and you like it ... you don't have to change plans.". (San Francisco Chronicle -- Business)

    Could Vision Problems Be Linked to Earlier Death?  Oct 14, 2009
    The most likely possible tie between poor vision and death, according to the study in the Archives of Ophthalmology. Trouble walking. (MEDLINEplus)

    Signs Of Macular Degeneration May Predict Heart Disease  Oct 14, 2009
    This research was published in the October issue of Ophthalmology. Adapted from materials provided by , via , a service of AAAS. Email or share this story. (Science Daily)

    Older Eye Techniques Equal LASIK  Oct 13, 2009
    And most showed relatively little change in their vision over the years, according to findings published in the British Journal of Ophthalmology ... SOURCE: British Journal of Ophthalmology, October 2009. (Newsmax)

    Noncorrectable vision problems associated with shorter lifespan in older adults  Oct 13, 2009
    Visual problems that cannot be corrected are associated with increased risk of death among individuals between the ages of 49 and 74, and all visual impairments may be associated with the risk of death in older adults, according to a report in the October issue of Archives of Ophthalmology, one of the JAMA/Archives journals. Visual impairment has been associated with a higher risk of death as well as factors that may lead to increased death such as unintentional injury, depression, lower body... (EurekAlert!)

    Entrepreneur opens group homes for elderly  Oct 13, 2009
    Corneal Consultants Inc. and Lincoln Park Eye Associates Inc. merged practices in January to create Dayton Eye Associates Inc. The merger brings together five ophthalmologists, who handle several specialities, including pediatric and general ophthalmology, as well as an optometrist. The merged practice includes Drs. (Dayton Business Journal, OH)

    Cancer drug is no different in effectiveness as gold standard treatment for macular degeneration  Oct 10, 2009
    The study, which appears currently on-line in the American Journal of Ophthalmology, is the first to report early outcomes of a prospective, double-masked, randomized, controlled trial comparing Bevacizumab to Ranibizumab for the treatment of exudative (wet) age-related macular degeneration ... "Our study aimed to offer early, six-month results of a randomized, double-masked, single center clinical trial comparing the off-label use of bevacizumab with the current gold standard ranibizumab. With... (EurekAlert!)

    Two-thirds of world's blind are women: Study  Oct 9, 2009
    Some of the key findings of the report are Equal access to eye care could substantially reduce blindness in poor countries Simple and effective strategies can address the inequity within 2020 80 percent of blindness is avoidable and can be prevented, cured or treated 45 million people worldwide are blind, and 269 million are vision impaired 90 percent of blind people live in low-income countries The world's leading cause of blindness is cataract Cataract is curable by... (India Times, India)

    Genetic Mutation A Strong Indicator Of Age-related Hearing Loss Risk  Oct 8, 2009
    11, 2006) Older adults with vision loss may be more likely to also have hearing loss, and the opposite appears true as well, according to a report in the October issue of Archives of Ophthalmology, one of the. . (Science Daily)

    Read more ...  Oct 7, 2009
    Since the financial meltdown, the tendency among international medical tourists has been to travel abroad for orthopaedic procedures such as hip and knee replacements, heart procedures, ophthalmology and bariatric surgery. Trailing behind these procedures are cosmetic and dental surgery, according to figures presented yesterday to a South African health tourism congress aimed at pulling more health tourists to our sunny climes. (Business Report, South Africa)

    Cherry Eye in Canines  Oct 7, 2009
    According to Dr. Erica Tolar, veterinary ophthalmology resident at the University of Illinois Veterinary Teaching Hospital in Urbana, some veterinarians will opt to leave a gland exposed if repeated replacement surgery has not been successful. Although untreated cherry eyes can become infected, Dr. Tolar says that the gland is still functional and is not always irritating to the dog. (Suite101.com)

    Researchers Discover Novel Circulation In Human Eye, New Glaucoma Treatment Target  Oct 6, 2009
    "Good vision depends on the stable flow of fluid into and out of the eye. Any disturbance of this delicate fluid balance can lead to high eye pressure and irreversible glaucoma damage," said study co-author Dr. Neeru Gupta, Director of the Glaucoma Unit and Nerve Protection Unit at St. Michael's Hospital and Professor of Ophthalmology at U of T. ... cel, who also serves as Director of the Ophthalmic Pathology Laboratory in U of T's Department of Ophthalmology and research Scientist at the Keenan... (Science Daily)

    Study shows that color plays musical chairs in the brain  Oct 2, 2009
    "An aspect of human vision that we normally don't appreciate is that different features of an object, including color and shape, can be represented in different parts of the brain," said Shevell, the Eliakim Hastings Moore Distinguished Service Professor in Psychology and Ophthalmology l Science. If a person sees a basketball coming, it is perceived as having a particular color, shape and velocity. (EurekAlert!)

    New Treatments Hold Hope for Failing Eyes  Sep 30, 2009
    Researchers have discovered a combination therapy of vitamins and antioxidants that reduces the risk of progressive vision loss by more than 20 percent, said Dr. David W. Parke II, executive vice president and chief executive of the American Academy of Ophthalmology ... "We now have treatments where, when we catch people early in the course of the disease, the chance of vision loss is less than 10 percent over a two-year period," said George Williams, chairman of ophthalmology and director of... (MEDLINEplus)

    Antibiotic shortage pinches hospitals  Sep 26, 2009
    The Apothecary Shops has ramped up production of the drug and expects to make enough for the estimated 3,000 births that occur each month in the Phoenix vicinity, said Jim Rehovsky, Apothecary's national director of ophthalmology. Rehovsky said he heard from several area hospitals searching for the drug, including St. Joseph's, Banner Good Samaritan, Scottsdale Healthcare and others. (AZCentral -- Business)

    Learning curve  Sep 26, 2009
    She also needs regular ophthalmology appointment to check for tumours behind the eye. "The lump has not affected Emma and she is happy and giggly," said Tracey. (BBC News -- UK)

    Davidson purchases Farmington office  Sep 25, 2009
    Following an internship at St. John s Mercy Medical Center in Creve Coeur, he completed his residency in Ophthalmology at Saint Louis University. Dr. Davidson is a board-certified ophthalmologist and is a member of the American Academy of Ophthalmology, the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery, and the Missouri Society of Eye Physicians and Surgeons ... Dr. Davidson specializes in advanced cataract surgery and general ophthalmology. (Park Hills Daily Journal, MO)

    In lust for lashes, few bat an eyeat strange risks  Sep 24, 2009
    While there have been reports of a few hairy cheeks in online forums a 2004 case study in the American Journal of Ophthalmology also details a glaucoma patient who experienced hair growth on her upper left cheek approximately 4 weeks after starting the eye drops doctors say this isnt something theyre hearing a lot about. The most common complaint is that some people develop eye irritation, says Kauvar. (MSNBC -- Health)

    Gene Variant Linked To Glaucoma Identified  Sep 24, 2009
    The study by Kang Zhang, MD, PhD, Director of the Institute for Genomic Medicine and professor of ophthalmology and human genetics at the Shiley Eye Center at UC San Diego and J. Fielding Hejtmancik, MD, PhD, medical officer and chief of the Ophthalmic Molecular Genetics Section at the National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, along with the Barbados Family Study Group and colleagues in the United States, China and Barbados, will be published in the early online edition of the... (Science Daily)

    Glaucoma Tied to Gene Variants in Blacks  Sep 24, 2009
    "The cause and progression of glaucoma are poorly understood, although we know there is a strong genetic predisposition to the disease," study co-author Dr. Robert N. Weinreb, director of the Hamilton Glaucoma Center and a professor of ophthalmology at the University of California, San Diego, said in a school news release ... "We have now identified very common gene variants that have a dramatic impact on an individual's risk for developing glaucoma," Dr. Kang Zhang, director of the Institute... (MEDLINEplus)

    AROUND THE GLOBE: Health care country-by-country  Sep 23, 2009
    Health care around the globe - USATODAY.com. Search hundreds of franchises and business opportunities to find the one that is right for you. (USA Today -- Money)

    New device finds early signs of eye disease in preemies  Sep 22, 2009
    "This new tool is changing the way we identify eye conditions in infants," says Cynthia Toth, MD, an ophthalmologist at the Duke Eye Center, who is leading the study that appears online this month in the journal Ophthalmology ... "Examining the retina with these methods is like looking at the surface of the ocean and only seeing dimly into the shallow water," says Toth, a professor of ophthalmology and biomedical engineering ... New advances in OCT led Joseph Izatt, a professor of biomedical... (EurekAlert!)

    Making eye contact  Sep 22, 2009
    Results of a study on bifocal contacts published in the journal Clinical Ophthalmology, 2008, revealed a success rate for long-term wearers of 30-40 percent, which was attributed to various designs and types. The study results highlight the contacts' limits, including limited addition for near vision and correcting the effects of aging and eye diseases such as dry eye, astigmatism, cataract, glaucoma, etc. (The Clarion-Ledger)

    LCA-Vision CEO Straus resigns  Sep 19, 2009
    CEO Stephen Straus is resigning to lead another health care company outside the ophthalmology industry, the company announced Friday morning. The resignation ends a turbulent three-year run for Straus, who battled a weak economy, a declining stock price and a takeover attempt by dissident shareholders since joining the company in 2006. (Cincinnati Business Courier, OH)

    Scientists Cure Color Blindness In Monkeys  Sep 17, 2009
    D., a professor of ophthalmology at the University of Washington ... D., a professor of ophthalmology at the University of Washington and senior author of the study, began training two squirrel monkeys named Dalton and Sam. (Science Daily)

    Loci Color: Gene Therapy Cures Color-Blindness in Adult Monkeys  Sep 17, 2009
    "Everything else is normal about them," , a professor of ophthalmology at the University of Washington (U.W.) School of Medicine in Seattle and senior study author, says of the monkeys ... Neitz and his wife, Maureen Neitz, also in the U.W. ophthalmology department, and the rest of their team have pinpointed that gene and developed a working virus vector to carry a functional copy of it. (Scientific American)

    Tooth helps restore desperate woman's sight  Sep 17, 2009
    Nearly two weeks later, her visual acuity is 20/70 without corrective lenses in the treated eye, said Dr. Victor Perez, associate professor of ophthalmology, and a cornea specialist at the institute ... She lost hope of ever seeing again," he said, and was especially distressed that she might never see the granddaughter born while she was blind. Not all surgeons are sold on the procedure. Dr. Ivan Schwab with the American Academy of Ophthalmology told CNN he believes the process is too difficult... (CNN)

    Gene therapy fixes color blindness in monkeys  Sep 17, 2009
    "People who are color-blind feel that they are missing out," said study researcher Jay Neitz, a professor of ophthalmology at the University of Washington, Seattle. "If we could find a way to do this with complete safety in human eyes, as we did with monkeys, I think there would be a lot of people who would want it.". (MSNBC -- Environment)

    'Gene cure' for colour blindness  Sep 17, 2009
    Winfried Amoaku, an expert in ophthalmology at the University of Nottingham, said the research could eventually benefit approximately 7% of males and 1% of females born with genetic colour deficiencies. He said: "These research seems to be the first in primates to address the colour vision deficiencies and indicate that intact cells are modifiable in their colour perception. "Further research is required, however, before this comes to human clinical trials, and therapy in the clinics. (BBC News -- Americas)

    Steroid Injections May Help Restore Vision In Some Patients With Blocked Eye Veins  Sep 16, 2009
    15, 2009) Injecting the eye with the corticosteroid triamcinolone appears effective in improving the vision of some patients with retinal vein occlusion, an important cause of vision loss that results from blockages in the blood vessels in the retina, according to two reports in the September issue of Archives of Ophthalmology, one of the JAMA/Archives journals. A 1-milligram dose of triamcinolone may be a treatment option for certain patients with blockages in the main portion of the retinal... (Science Daily)

    Laser Treatment For BRVO Is Safer Than Corticosteroid Injections And Equally Effective, Study Finds  Sep 16, 2009
    The results appear in the September 2009 issue of Archives of Ophthalmology, published alongside findings from a separate trial within the SCORE study, which looked at blockages in larger retinal veins. Participants in the study included 411 people with BRVO who were an average of 67 years old. (Science Daily)

    Health reform war  Sep 16, 2009
    5 billion in savings over four years, withdrawing the health insurance rebate from higher earners and dramatically carving into the incomes of another set of high earners: the practitioners of lucrative specialities like obstetrics and ophthalmology. Look at the result. (Sydney Morning Herald -- Opinion)

    Pieris AG Enters into Anticalin Collaboration With Allergan, Inc.  Sep 15, 2009
    "Allergan has world class expertise in ophthalmology, and we look forward to working together to develop Anticalins as important medicines for the treatment of a number of ocular diseases. This collaboration further validates the potential for Anticalins as a new drug-class", said Claus Schalper, Interim-CEO of Pieris. About Pieris AG. (PR Newswire)

    Margaret A. Bengs: Don't turn doctors into reform scapegoats  Sep 12, 2009
    GnanaDev, a trauma surgeon practicing at a San Bernardino County public hospital, told members of Congress that he personally sees Medi-Cal patients, including children, "who have traveled hundreds of miles to get orthopedic and ophthalmology services because they could not find a doctor to treat them." He also cited three-month waits for Medi-Cal patients to see specialists at clinics. In the parking lot outside Lungren's town hall meeting, Dein put it this way: There is "no free market" in... (Sacramento Bee -- Opinion)

    West inducts 4 into new Academic Hall of Fame  Sep 12, 2009
    Allbaugh, a doctor of veterinary medicine, is an assistant professor of veterinary ophthalmology at Kansas State University's department of clinical services. "I think that's what the hall of fame is all about, people who have made some significant contributions," Moon said. (Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier)

    Chimps Trained To Enable Keepers To Take DNA Samples With Cheek Swabs  Sep 11, 2009
    7, 2005) A study led by Dr. Herbert Kaufman, Boyd Professor of Ophthalmology at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in New Orleans, published in the January issue of Investigative Ophthalmology. (Apr. (Science Daily)

    Glaucoma? That's No Excuse to Skip Your Workout  Sep 9, 2009
    SOURCE: BMC Ophthalmology, online August 13, 2009. Reuters Health. (MEDLINEplus)

    ISTA Pharmaceuticals' Bepreve(TM) Receives FDA Approval for the Treatment of Ocular Itching Due to Allergies  Sep 9, 2009
    "Patients who experience ocular itching due to allergies want comfortable, quick and long-lasting relief for their eyes. Bepreve is the first truly new treatment for allergic conjunctivitis approved in several years. Allergic conjunctivitis, not to be confused with viral or bacterial conjunctivitis or pink eye, is an eye allergy that often results in ocular itching, and I am excited patients will have this new treatment option," commented Gregg J. Berdy, M.D., Assistant Professor of Clinical... (PR Newswire)

    Archives: Ophthalmology

    Back to Health News

[ Terms Of Use | Privacy | About ]
©1998-2009 SurfWax, Inc.
All rights reserved. Patents pending.



Copyright SurfWax, Inc. 2009