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Contact Us PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 24 November 2009 16:50

Yorkshire Eye Research can be contacted;

by email:                 This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

by telephone:           (0113) 206 5047

by post:               Yorkshire Eye Research

                            Eye Dept,

                           1st Floor Chancellor Wing

                           St James's University Hospital

                           Leeds

                           West Yorkshire LS9 7TF

 

Thank You

Last Updated on Monday, 04 January 2010 13:31
 
Case study PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 28 April 2009 15:40

Case Study - Age-related Macular Degeneration

Age-related Macular Degeneration (ArMD) affects 3 million elderly people in the UK and is likely to affect most of us if we live long enough. Here is a patient's account on living with wet ArMD.

"When I first noticed a slight waviness to horizontal lines and surfaces, I mentioned it to my optician, who, to my surprise sent me straight off to my doctor, who, in turn, sent me to the hospital Eye Department. I was informed I had Wet AMD. I knew nothing about the condition or what to expect.

I started receiving treatment. Only my left eye had the condition at that time and I was given PDT to try to improve it or stop it getting worse. I was coping well and not too worried but, as I had been warned, my right eye also became affected. Now I began to notice deterioration in my sight. I stopped driving. My whole life-style was about to change quite radically.

I had always been very active. I was an avid reader and I loved to play the piano, embroider, draw & paint, take my handicapped husband to places where he could walk a little and look after the house. However, as my eye condition progressed I found I could only read newspaper headlines and maybe the old paragraph or two with the aid of a magnifying glass (x5). I stopped reading books and found sewing, writing and drawing to be too difficult. I tried, but failed, to play the piano as I need to read music and it was impossible. I stopped driving as I knew I could no longer drive safely. If I walked into town I was apprehensive. I would only cross the road at a lighted pedestrian crossing because I was too nervous, feeling that I was unable to judge the speed and distance from me of an approaching vehicle - even if there were none I wouldn’t cross except at a designated crossing. I couldn’t recognise people’s faces. I once said “who’s that?” to my next door neighbour of 21 years!

My life, and my husband’s life, had contracted. I has lost my independence and self-reliance and often felt depressed and unhappy. Television was a blur, but I liked listening to music. People told me to get “talking books” from the library but I’m not good at sitting and doing nothing with my hands if I’m listening. The thought of “talking books” upset me a great deal, possibly because I felt it was the end of my ability to see and to be autonomous. It was difficult trying to encourage my husband to try harder when I was in such a low state myself.

Meanwhile I started receiving Lucentis injections in my right eye. My sight seemed to be deteriorating, getting more & more blurred. But, as it happened, a clean-up procedure was arranged for a film behind an implant which had developed after a cataract operation some years ago. Within an hour a miracle had happened for me! THE LUCENTIS TREATMENT HAD WORKED!!! And now, with my right eye, I could see clearly again. I could see raindrops on a window, read car number plates on the way home, see birds flying, people’s faces… I felt like a child, excited and in wonder. Now I can read with just my reading glasses as before, now I can play the piano again and enjoy it. I can enjoy all my previous activities I thought I had lost and live a normal life again and have regained my self confidence. I can recognise my friends from afar and realise far more than I ever did how precious one’s sight is.

So, my very grateful thanks to my Ophthalmic Consultant, to all the other hospital doctors, medical staff, nurses etc for all they have done for me and others like me. I also like to thank everyone involved in the research that has been carried out and is ongoing regarding this condition."

 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 19 May 2009 14:58
 
Corneal eye disease PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Monday, 15 September 2008 20:52
The cornea (the clear outer surface of the eye) can be damaged by disease or injury; vision becomes severely limited and blindness can result. The cornea can be removed and replaced by a cornea from a donated eye. Research is seeking to improve the success rate of corneal graft surgery.

cornea
Last Updated on Monday, 15 September 2008 20:53
 
Gaza Strip families in scientific discovery PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 28 April 2009 16:14

Gaza Strip families in scientific discovery

 

A previously undiscovered link between the formation of teeth and eyes has been uncovered by University of Leeds researchers, through studies in three families living in a village in the war-torn Gaza strip. Funded by the Wellcome Trust and Yorkshire Eye Research the project team sought to identify the cause of a condition they named Jalili syndrome in which related individuals suffered loss of eyesight, almost from birth, and poorly developed teeth.  Jalili syndrome is named after team member Ismail Jalili, who travelled regularly to Gaza and the occupied West Bank trouble spots to collect blood samples in 2008.

 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 28 April 2009 16:25
 
Diabetic retinopathy PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Monday, 15 September 2008 20:50
Diabetes is the leading cause of blindness in the working population in the UK. Diabetes affects sight by causing blood vessels in the retina to leak or become blocked off. In the early stages of the disease vision is unaffected, but in later stages without treatmet, diabetic retinopathy may cause significantly blurred vision. In rare cases serious sight loss may result as a result of progressive retinopathy and retinal detachment. As with most eye diseases, early detection is crucial. The damage caused to blood vessels by diabetes can be held in check by laser treatment. Blindness may be prevented in 90% of cases, but any vision already lost cannot be restored. Currently laser treatment for diabetic retinopathy works by "ablating" spots of the retina - effectively spot welding the retina in place and reducing the need for oxygen and reducing the stimulus for new blood vessel growth. The spot weld in effect damages a focal spot on the retina, but as a result stabilises progressive diabetic retinopathy, otherwise, new blood vessel formation can be harmful as vessels can bleed can cause "vitreous haemorrhage" - ie bleeding within the back chamber of the eye. Halting progressive disease with laser treatment is very effective, both for diabetic macular disease that affects central vision and also for proliferative diabetic retinopathy. In proliferative diabetic retinopathy, "panretinal" laser is applied to treat large areas of the retina. This form of laser treatment can affect peripheral field (ie vision to the side) such that the ability to drive is affected, however it is only performed when the risks of not treating are judged to be less that the benefits. New treatments on the horizon such as selective retina laser treatment offer the potential to treat the retina without affecting peripheral vision. Selective laser treatment works by applying a very low dose of laser in minute bursts (ie pulses measured in millionths of a second), which has the potential to selectively treat only diseased cells). Currently research is ongoing as to the effectiveness of this technique, and results are promising.

Diabetic retinopathy
Diabetic retinopathy affecting macula region.
 
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