Artificial Cornea To Reach Patients This Year
kkleiner writes "A German-led team of researchers has developed a new version of an ophthalmological polymer to which the eye will bond and still function normally. 'The new polymer could help restore sight to thousands waiting for corneal transplants around the world. The artificial cornea has passed clinical trials and is ready to see expanded use in patients this year. ... In order to work in the human body, an artificial cornea has to meet some stringent requirements. First, it has to bond to the human eye around its edge. ... The center of the artificial cornea, however, does not promote cell growth and remains clear so that it can be seen through. The artificial cornea also has to move freely with the eyelid and balance moisture on its faces.'"
I didn't see this coming.
There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
So you'd have your cornea removed and a new one put in? As someone who's had many eye injuries in my life, let me be the first to say "ouch".
"The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
"The artificial cornea has passed clinical trials and is ready to see expanded use in patients this year. .."
I see what you did there.
I read through the whole article until I got near the end. It was only then that I realized that while the article said "cornea" I kept thinking "retina" for some unknown reason. In any case, an artificial cornea is a terrific breakthrough. People who use laser eye surgery to correct their vision can only do so a limited number of times. After that, a cornea would need to be replaced. Ideally, a replacement cornea would be able to correct vision without further adjustments.
More interestingly, an artificial cornea can do things to improve the health of the eye. For example, an artificial cornea could be made to block UV rays or even be polarized. I'm still waiting for telescopic vision corneas but I doubt that will happen. But the idea of having built-in sunglasses is interesting to me... not that I would have it done unless it were necessary to replace my cornea anyway...
Whoa maybe I do have some problem with my cornmea.
Sounds like a simple cornea cutting that has been done at any "laser" eye surgery, followed by a prosthetic instead of a burn treatment....I bet they keep these on hand in the future for when they screw up the corneal cutting which blinds people.
I read that as patents at first, but jokes aside I decided to do a brief search on patents. There seems to be a method out similar to that described in the article, although my guess would be the article is more about the all important application too...
Abstract
Germanium-containing organic polymers are obtained by polymerizing 3-trichlorogermylpropionic acid obtained by reacting halogermanium-phosphoric acid complexes with acrylic acid. The polymers are markedly effective in treating opthalmological disorders.
[2/29/1980] http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/4296123/fulltext.html
But I will save judgment there because I do not know the details.
Also in the article:
Storsberg helped develop a new version of an opthalmological polymer which the eye will bond to and still allow to function properly.
Anyone who cannot do a simple spellcheck on that word...haha nevermind I enjoyed the read. (Spelled: ophthalmological)
We should start a new Slashdot and return control to the geeks. It actually wouldn't be that hard to get some users to
Reply needed sorry:
The patent listed deals a bit with a chemical used by the German scientists, but does not include much outside of that. Still interesting imo...whatever.
We should start a new Slashdot and return control to the geeks. It actually wouldn't be that hard to get some users to
You would most likely have somehow trashed your cornea to even have this kind of thing an option.
Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
I've got Keratoconus, a nasty degenerative corneal condition that has to potential to leave me legally bind. This news just made my day!
I can finally get replacement eyes for all the stupid acts of humanity I've witnessed in my short lifetime that have dulled my sensitivity to this world.
I can see right through them!
Are you the butterfly ballot election guy from Florida's recount? http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_sHB-X1i5MOU/SKIH1_P7gCI/AAAAAAAAAWY/b7t-bPpashA/s400/florida_hanging_chad_recount.jpg And you thought you faded into obscurity.
Game: Player 'Donald J Trump' now has AI skill level 'experimental'.
This is an example of something that doesn't require space and has 14 billion potential sales. This is why Space Nuttery is DEAD. BIOTECH is the future.
Imagine corneas grown in a lab from your own cells, in your local mall.
Much more important than mining asteroids for water, when there's already 10x10^18 kg of water here on Earth.
Yes! One more step closer to a Utopian Borg society.
Replacement corneas cannot make you forget the time you were tricked into clicking that Goatse link.
Keratoconous is a nasty piece of work.
Nobody knows why it happens, if I would get a penny for everytime somebody asked me why I have not got laser surgery done I would be richer than the Oracle of Omaha (or just Oracle, to keep in line with the geeky nature of the site).
Keratoconus can't be treated with laser surgery because the cornea is actually deforming, this means that laser surgery may "help" for a short time before your cornea gets worst (actually laser surgery is completely counter indicated for keratoconus patients).
Also the deformation of the cornea with keratoconous is very unkind: while other people with other defects have a smooth cornea the keratoconus patient's cornea deforms in an uneven manner, so contact lenses that would help with other ailments may be completely useless for patients with many keratoconus.
My vision deteriorated rapidely in my 20s, now, a few years later (ahem,ahem) I have been lucky that the defect has not degenerated too fast and I can lead a mostly normal life with glasses (very thick ones) after having tried several times to use contact lenses (hard ones, not the soft variety that some people use even for cosmetic purposes, try a hard lesn that will not stay put and you will not want to use them again).
I can't drive, and that of course imposes lots of limitations (thankfully being relatively succesful in life has menat I move more by plane than by car, so one thing taken one thing gotten).
This is the best news I have had for a while! (even if this is not indicated for keratoconous, I have not RTFA, but I will shortly; this would mean researchers are working on this field and getting results, something particularly tricky for keratoconus patients since the ailment is very rare)
What happened to my comment? That should have read:
I've had two eye surgeries (link and link), and the first was completely painless. The second was only painful because I have arthritis in my neck and they bolted my head to the table for the surgery. The eye didn't hurt a bit, but the arthritis was excruciating. Also, I had to hold my head down for two weeks after the surgery, and that was no fun at all. But it beat going blind, and I don't have to wear those thick glasses I wore all my life.
Wierd; I previewed it, too.
Free Martian Whores!
Just buy a pair of rose colored glasses.
BTW, they can't replace your whole eye, but you can already get the lens behind yor iris replaced.
Free Martian Whores!
wow thats interesting. need to keep us updated
This could be AWESOME! I mean, I can't really complain as a whole. 20 years ago I'd be looking at a corneal transplant, now I can wear gas permeable lenses for the rest of my life sans transplant.
Things like laser eye correction were not a possibility, I wonder if they could attach a "shaped" cornea to help my vision?
Either way, very cool stuff...
Computer Science is Applied Philosophy