Artificial cornea offers better results for infants, some blind patients
13th Nov 2006, 18:39 GMT
Infants and adults who are blind due to a cloudy or damaged cornea are seeing some remarkable results thanks to a new version of an artificial implant that takes the place of the cornea, the clear covering of the eye that serves as our window on the world.
Artificial cornea offers better results for infants, some blind patients related news:
- Artificial Cornea Offers Better Results for Infants, Some Blind Patients — WebWire - Recent Headlines
- Artificial cornea offers new hope for blind patients — NewKerala World News
- New Eye Implant Clears Cloudy Vision — LiveScience.com
- Plastic cornea transplant restores vision — Health
- New study indicates Invirase results in similar levels of viral suppression to lopinavir — EurekAlert! - Breaking News
- Adding Bevacizumab to First-Line Lung Cancer Therapy Shows Potential — Medscape Headlines
- No Braille Books For Blind Children — Press Release and Top Children and Youth News From 24-7 Press Release Newswire
- Iron-deficient infants may lag behind their peers in teenage — NewKerala Health News
- Safe Haven Law Gives Abandoned Infants A Chance — Chicago news, weather, sports, traffic and video from cbs2chicago.com: Top News
- Profile America: Artificial Snow — Kansas City infoZine Environment Headlines
Latest news from EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health:
- Enbrel provides sustained clinical improvements for ankylosing spondylitis for up to 3 years
- Enbrel first biologic with up to 9 years rheumatoid arthritis safety, sustained efficacy data
- UCSD computer scientist wins Young Investigator Award, research on snake venom proteins highlighted
- Why do insects like to eat some plants more than others?
- Opposites do not attract
- Wild gorillas carriers of an SIV virus close to the AIDS virus
- New data show ACTOS (pioglitazone HCl) halted progression of atherosclerosis as indicated by CIMT
- Pourquié lab identifies genes involved in formation of vertebral precursors
- Healthier kids just the click of a remote away
- Adolescents, risks and the pitfalls of rationality