Focus: NIH Eye Inst Grants

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27-Aug-2020 1:25 PM EDT
Mass Eye and Ear Doctors Collaborate with Dana-Farber to Rebuild Damaged Corneas Using Patients’ Own Stem Cells for First Time in United States
Massachusetts Eye and Ear

Surgeons at Mass Eye and Ear have replaced the ocular surface of four patients who each experienced chemical burns to one eye by using their own stem cells taken from the other healthy eye, in a technique known as “cultivated autologous limbal epithelial cell transplantation” (CALEC). These four cases, all part of an ongoing clinical trial supported by the National Eye Institute of the NIH, represent the first procedures of their kind to occur in the United States.

6-Aug-2020 1:55 PM EDT
Multifocal contact lenses slow myopia progression in children
NIH, National Eye Institute (NEI)

Children wearing multifocal contact lenses had slower progression of their myopia, according to results from a clinical trial funded by the National Eye Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health. The findings support an option for controlling the condition, also called nearsightedness, which increases the risk of cataracts, glaucoma and retinal detachment later in life. Investigators of the Bifocal Lenses In Nearsighted Kids (BLINK) Study published the results August 11 in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Released: 15-Jul-2020 11:20 AM EDT
Vision loss in children whose eyesight may be 20/20 requires new diagnostic and teaching strategies
NIH, National Eye Institute (NEI)

Cerebral (cortical) visual impairment (CVI) is a condition that interferes with the ability of the brain to process information from the eyes, and it has become a leading cause of visual impairment in the U.S.

Released: 1-Jul-2020 9:45 AM EDT
Exercise can slow or prevent vision loss, study finds
University of Virginia Health System

Exercise can slow or prevent the development of macular degeneration and may benefit other common causes of vision loss, such as glaucoma and diabetic retinopathy, new research suggests.

21-Apr-2020 12:05 PM EDT
Very low-dose Avastin effective for preventing blindness in preterm infants
NIH, National Eye Institute (NEI)

Babies born prematurely who require treatment to prevent blindness from retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) could be treated with a dose of Avastin (bevacizumab) that is a fraction of the dose commonly used for ROP currently. Results from the dose-finding study were published April 23 in JAMA Ophthalmology. The study was conducted by the Pediatric Eye Disease Investigator Group (PEDIG) and supported by the National Eye Institute (NEI), part of the National Institutes of Health.

20-Apr-2020 12:05 PM EDT
NEI researchers link age-related DNA modifications to susceptibility to eye disease
NIH, National Eye Institute (NEI)

National Eye Institute (NEI) researchers profiling epigenomic changes in light-sensing mouse photoreceptors have a clearer picture of how age-related eye diseases may be linked to age-related changes in the regulation of gene expression. The findings, published online April 21 in Cell Reports, suggest that the epigenome could be targeted as a therapeutic strategy to prevent leading causes of vision loss, such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD).

Released: 9-Mar-2020 9:00 AM EDT
‘Primitive’ Stem Cells Shown to Regenerate Blood Vessels in The Eye
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have successfully turned back the biological hands of time, coaxing adult human cells in the laboratory to revert to a primitive state, and unlocking their potential to replace and repair damage to blood vessels in the retina caused by diabetes. The findings from this experimental study, they say, advance regenerative medicine techniques aimed at reversing the course of diabetic retinopathy and other blinding eye diseases.

Released: 22-Jan-2020 10:25 AM EST
Potential Way to Halt Blinding Macular Degeneration Identified
University of Virginia Health System

It would be the first treatment for "dry" age-related macular degeneration and could significantly improve treatment for wet AMD.

Released: 27-Nov-2019 8:00 AM EST
Helper Protein Worsens Diabetic Eye Disease
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a recent study using mice, lab-grown human retinal cells and patient samples, Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they found evidence of a new pathway that may contribute to degeneration of the light sensitive tissue at the back of the eye. The findings, they conclude, bring scientists a step closer to developing new drugs for a central vision-destroying complication of diabetes that affects an estimated 750,000 Americans.

Released: 28-May-2019 10:00 AM EDT
Finding A Cell’s True Identity
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Scientists have long sorted cells into different varieties based on their appearance under a microscope or, for differences that are more visually subtle, based on the behavior of a handful of genes. But in a bid to reveal even more distinctive differences and similarities, researchers from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center, the Johns Hopkins Institute for Genetic Medicine and the Johns Hopkins Department of Neuroscience developed two new artificial intelligence methods that decipher complex gene activity controlling cell fate decisions in retina development and relate this gene activity to what occurs in other tissues and across different species.

Released: 16-May-2019 9:00 AM EDT
Research Suggests Revision to Common View on How Retinal Cells in Mammals Process Light
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say that new experiments with mouse eye tissues strongly suggest that a longstanding “textbook concept” about the way a mammal’s retina processes light needs a rewrite.

Released: 10-Apr-2019 10:00 AM EDT
Experimental Drug Delivers One-Two Punch to Vision Loss
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In studies with lab-grown human cells and in mice, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers have found that an experimental drug may be twice as good at fighting vision loss as previously thought.

2-Aug-2018 12:00 PM EDT
Enzyme Helps Build Motor That Drives Neuron Death
Vanderbilt University

The process, discovered in the axons of neurons, is implicated in Alzheimer’s, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, traumatic brain injury and other diseases or injuries to the nervous system.

Released: 14-Jun-2018 2:05 PM EDT
A sprinkle of platinum nanoparticles onto graphene makes brain probes more sensitive
University of California San Diego

Graphene electrodes could enable higher quality brain imaging thanks to new research by a team of engineers and neuroscientists at UC San Diego. The researchers developed a technique, using platinum nanoparticles, to lower the impedance of graphene electrodes by 100 times while keeping them transparent. In tests on transgenic mice, the electrodes were able to record and image neuronal activity (calcium ion spikes) at of large groups of neurons and individual brain cells.

Released: 22-Feb-2018 8:00 AM EST
Low Vision Research Shifts Into Overdrive
NIH, National Eye Institute (NEI)

Tim Goetz drives about 200,000 miles each year. Remarkably, Goetz is legally blind. Research funded by the National Eye Institute (NEI) is helping Goetz and others like him get or stay behind the wheel while keeping roads safe for everyone.

Released: 4-Jan-2018 10:05 AM EST
NEI-Funded Research Suggests Repetitive Strain From Eye Movement May Play a Role in Glaucoma
NIH, National Eye Institute (NEI)

Common, unavoidable eye movements may be a cause of glaucoma in people with normal intraocular pressure (normal-tension glaucoma), according to new research supported by the National Eye Institute. The findings suggest that over time eye movement strains the optic nerve, the bundle of nerve fibers between the eye and brain. The research may also explain why tension-lowering eye drops can improve normal-tension glaucoma. Glaucoma is the second leading cause of blindness worldwide and January is Glaucoma Awareness Month.

20-Nov-2017 2:00 PM EST
Scientists Find Key to Regenerating Blood Vessels
Sanford Burnham Prebys

Florida researchers have identified a signaling pathway that is essential for angiogenesis, the growth of new blood vessels from pre-existing vessels. The findings, published in Nature Communications, may improve current strategies to improve blood flow in ischemic tissue, such as that found in atherosclerosis and peripheral vascular disease associated with diabetes.

Released: 31-Oct-2017 12:00 PM EDT
Uncomfortable Sight from an Ancient Reflex of the Eye
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

The eyes are for seeing, but they have other important biological functions, including automatic visual reflexes that go on without awareness. The reflexive system of the human eye also produces a conscious, visual experience, according to a new study from researchers in the Perelman School of Medicine and School of Arts and Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania.

18-Oct-2017 2:50 PM EDT
Researchers Identify Protein That Plays Key Role in Diabetic Blindness
University of Utah Health

Researchers at University of Utah Health have identified a protein (ARF6) that when inhibited reduces diabetic retinopathy, a condition that results when blood vessels at the back of the eye leak fluid into the eye, impairing vision.



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