Tooth in the eye: Revolutionary operation brings blind patients back!
Find out more about the first tooth-in-eye operation in Canada that gives blind patients hope for eyesight.
Tooth in the eye: Revolutionary operation brings blind patients back!
In an extraordinary medical procedure that sounds like a science fiction film, the first "dental-in-eye" operation was carried out in Vancouver, Canada. Brent Chapman, a 33-year-old man who has been blind since childhood, has undergone a rare intervention in which his own tooth, equipped with a special plastic lens, has been transplanted into his eye. Loud oe24.at If the operation was referred to as osteo-in-andonto keratoprosthesis (OOKP) and is one of the last options for patients with severe corneal blindness, which was created due to injuries or illnesses.
Dr. Greg Moloney, who carried out the intervention, explained that the tooth offers an ideal structure to keep the lens because it consists of dentin, the toughest substance of the human body. At Brent Chapman, the corner tooth was removed, the lens was used and the tooth was then planted. A second operation will follow a few months later to finally integrate the lens. This method is only used in exceptional cases, as with Chapman, whose visual problems are due to a difficult reaction when taking ibuprofen at the age of 13, reported The Daily Scan.
What can the patients expect?
Chapman's case is not alone; Other patients such as Gail Lane, who blindly blindly piled up at the age of 64, also had a similar procedure recently. Her point of view illuminates the challenges that blind people have in life without eyesight. These operations take place in Mount Saint Joseph Hospital and are the result of an extensive medical project that aims to make the "dental-in-eye" surgery known in Canada. Dr. Moloney and his team have high expectations of the possibilities that this technology could offer for future patients.
OOKP operation is particularly suitable for people whose retina and optic nerve are intact, but which are out of the question due to scars, autoimmune diseases or injuries for a classic cornea transplant. Chapman himself expressed his hopes for a return to active life, including basketball games and travel, and said: "I imagined that I can play basketball again - and finally throw baskets again." This innovative technique is not only medical progress, but also a potential new life for those who fight with severe visual losses.