BASCOM PALMER RECEIVES MULTIMILLION DOLLAR AWARD TO SUPPORT FUNCTIONAL WHOLE-EYE TRANSPLANT
"Bascom Palmer is leading a groundbreaking surgical approach to whole human eye transplantation and optic nerve regeneration, marking an exciting advancement in vision restoration," says
Preparing for Eye Transplant
"This program represents the true power of collaborative science, bringing together experts across disciplines to confront one of the most complex challenges in modern medicine," said
"The award to the University of Miami consortium of multidisciplinary investigators is to develop a workflow to recover a donor's eye, a method to preserve the eye and a technique for evaluating the viability of retinal tissue for transplantation," said
"This groundbreaking project holds the promise of yielding novel therapies for debilitating eye conditions such as glaucoma and diabetic retinopathy, as well as potentially unlocking a transformative breakthrough that brings hope to patients grappling with spinal cord injuries and other nerve-related afflictions," said
"The greatness in medicine is not about the possible but the impossible. This once-unthinkable challenge to overcome the biological barriers to optic nerve regeneration to regain vision is our shot at the moon. The audacious idea of a whole eye transplant stimulates the senses, stirs emotions and fuels the imagination of the scientific community," said Tse.
Transplantation to Cure Blindness
For more than 100 years, doctors have successfully transplanted the cornea, the clear tissue at the front of the eye, to treat specific types of vision loss. However, the transplantation of the entire eye, including the eyeball, blood supply and the optic nerve that connects it to the brain, is considered a significant challenge in the effort to cure blindness.
This groundbreaking project holds the promise of potentially unlocking a transformative breakthrough that brings hope to patients grappling with spinal cord injuries and other nerve-related afflictions.
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"This is an extremely complex procedure, and we have assembled a diverse team of physicians and scientists to solve it," said
Maintaining blood flow to the eye throughout the procedure is essential for the survival of the transplanted ocular tissue and functional sight. Experts in ophthalmology, surgical transplantation, neuroscience, microbiology and immunology, plastic surgery, computational science and biomedical engineering are working together on the project.
Team Science
Bascom Palmer's physicians and scientists include:
Felipe Medeiros , M.D., Ph.D., professor of ophthalmology and vice chair of research at the Miller School. He will provide expertise in data science and bioinformatics.Jean-Marie Parel , ETS-G, Ph.D., director of the ophthalmic biophysics center and associate professor of ophthalmology at the Miller School, who has created more than 350 surgical instruments and clinical devices that have enhanced clinical optic care worldwide.Jianhua (Jay) Wang , M.D., Ph.D., an electrical and computer engineer and professor of ophthalmology at the Miller School, who has developed a wide range of imaging modalities that study structural and functional alterations in the eyes.Victor Perez , M.D., an expert in ocular immunology, who will will evaluate the immune response to eye transplantation and devise immunomodulatory strategies for the success of the procedure.- Vittorio Porciatti,
D.Sc ., Bascom Palmer's director of research and professor of ophthalmology at the Miller School, who will bring his expertise as a neuroscientist, retinal electrophysiologist and biomedical engineer.
University of Miami collaborators on the project include:
Carolina Benjamin , M.D., an expert in microsurgical anatomical dissections within the skull base and associate professor of neurosurgery at the Miller School, who worked withDr. Tse on the refinement of the novel surgical approach to eye transplantation.Ashutosh Agarwal , Ph.D., a biomedical engineer working in collaboration withDr. Parel and Dr. Porciatti on an eye organ life-support system (eye-ECMO™) to keep the donor eye alive and functional.Robert Levy , Ph.D., a professor of microbiology and immunology, medicine and ophthalmology at the Miller School working alongsideDr. Perez on the immunological aspects of the project.
Provided by Newswise, online resource for knowledge-based news at www.newswise.com
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SOURCE University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
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