Retinal Degeneration
Among the retinal disorders being studied by scientists at Doheny Eye Institute are age-related macular degeneration (AMD), diabetic retinopathy (DR), retinitis pigmentosa (RP), retinal central vein occlusion, and retinopathy of prematurity.
Researchers are finding new ways to prevent, treat, and cure retinal disorders. These range from nutritional therapies to stem cell therapies. The nutritional therapies, for some forms of AMD, help patients who are at a mid-range stage of the disease. The stem cell therapies are designed to repair the retinal floor, called the retinal pigment epithelium, which malfunctions in many retinal degenerative disorders.
A specialized program at Doheny Eye Institute called the Doheny Image Reading Center (DIRC) is critically important to the worldwide vision research community. DIRC receives photographic images of the retinas of patients with retinal disorders at various stages; the DIRC scientists analyze and report on the images; the reports help scientists and medical doctors evaluate the effects of standard and experimental therapies on the progression of patients’ retinal disease.
Researchers
Zhihong (Jewel) Hu, PhD
Retina
Some Solutions Are Elegantly Low-Tech
I’m excited to share some important advances in the field that are the result of international collegial cooperation, intelligence and good humor. Tech can be magic, but in some cases, good old-fashioned talk is all that’s needed to move things forward.
Vision for the Future: Gene Therapy is Here
At Doheny we are poised to begin providing patients with access to clinical trials of pioneering gene therapy any day now. It’s an advance that seems a perfect way to end the year, or begin the new one, with exciting innovation and hope for improved vision for many.