Recent News & Media
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More than 40 scientists, doctors, and industry experts hand-picked from around the country are joining together to make whole eye transplants a reality.
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Precisely Yours
PRECISION HEALTH is the latest buzzword in medicine, promising to help doctors better tailor care to the individual and allow people to proactively address potential health issues before they become a problem. But it’s not always clear what that looks like in practice.
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The Paths to Clinical Care
IN MEDICINE, new treatments generally go through a long and rigorous process before reaching clinics or the operating room, where to improve patients’ lives. The faculty at the Byers Eye Institute are experts at this process. In fact, at Byers Eye Institute at Stanford, “from lab to clinic,” is practically a mantra among the innovative and award-winning researchers and doctors striving toward a shared goal of fighting blindness and preserving sight. .
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Life, Uninterrupted
JANET THOMPSON KNOWS better than most the value of a healthy lifestyle and preventative care to fend off disease, but she also knows first-hand that sometimes illness sneaks up on you anyway.
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Modern Day Textbook
Dr. Natalie Homer makes the ophthalmology podcasts she wished she had in 2018 during her training, but she is far from the only one filling the gap. Many Byers Eye Institute faculty have jumped into the world of podcasting to connect with other clinicians, encourage continuing education, provide career insights, and help people improve health.
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Game On
If you sit down with Khizer Khaderi, MD, MPH, to talk about his work at Stanford University connecting vision and performance, there’s a good chance that by the end of the conversation, he’ll be drawing diagrams that crisscross the page or that fill up a whiteboard.
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Giving Mission
IF BONNIE UYTENGSU could go back in time and pick any career she wanted, she would have made her way in medicine, as a doctor or as a researcher studying the intricacies of the brain and what makes it tick. Instead, she is helping doctors make those discoveries.
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AI Revolution
People think of their eyes as windows onto the world, but the physicians and professionals at the Byers Eye Institute at Stanford know they offer a window into our health. It’s that quality that allows ophthalmology to be at the forefront of artificial intelligence (AI) advances.
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Training the Next Generation
WHEN ADEETI AGGARWAL, MD, PhD, surveyed her residency options after medical school, the Byers Eye Institute stood out because it offered something that other residency programs didn’t: a chance to SOAR.
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Sight Restored
LARRY MOHR NEVER expected his eyesight to fail, until a tragic accident 20 years ago. The slow descent into blindness was, in his words, torture, made worse by the certainty that dark days were ahead.
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Drug Discovery
More than 150 researchers at the Byers Eye Institute more log hundreds of thousands of hours annually in our laboratories to advance the science that may ultimately lead to treatments for vision-stealing diseases.
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Improving Vision
When babies are born, they don’t see well. In fact, it takes months for the average infant to see colors and begin recognizing faces. For the first 12 months of life, their vision, perception, and coordination change rapidly, passing important milestones that help them take in the world around them. But sometimes a child doesn’t follow that trajectory, and it’s often not obvious that something has gone awry until well into their critical learning years, leaving them at a significant disadvantage.
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Meet Dr. M.E. Hartnett
WHEN MARY ELIZABETH (M.E.) HARTNETT, MD, arrived this year at the Byers Eye Institute, she brought with her a buzz of excitement that rippled through Stanford University and the international ophthalmology community.
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Palanker’s invention leads to restoration of vision in patients with age-related macular degeneration
Daniel Palanker, PhD, professor of ophthalmology and director of the Hansen Experimental Physics Laboratory, developed a photovoltaic retinal prosthesis for restoring sight in retinal degeneration. This technology has been commercialized through a partnership with Pixium Vision (Paris, France), and the product is called “PRIMA Bionic Vision System”.
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American Academy of Ophthalmology highlights Singh’s expertise on glaucoma surgery
Following his recent presentation at Glaucoma 360, Kuldev Singh, MD, MPH, professor of ophthalmology and director of the glaucoma service, was interviewed on the relevancy of trabeculectomy with the rising popularity of minimally invasive glaucoma surgery (MIGS).
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Ophthalmology Department hosting second annual Ocular Melanoma Benefit 5K Fun Run and Walk
Want a chance to race through the beautiful Baylands, all while honoring a great cause? On Sunday, May 19, the Byers Eye Institute will host the second annual “Lookin’ for a Cure Ocular Melanoma Benefit 5K Fun Run and Walk.”…
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Precision Medicine Will Rely on Proteins, Not Just DNA
Like an oasis in the desert, the splendor of precision medicine seems perpetually on the horizon. Even as technological advances bring genome sequencing into routine clinical use, it’s becoming clearer than ever that genomics reveals only part of the clinical picture.
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SOAR resident receives grant from Knights Templar Eye Foundation to support retina research
Luciano Custo Greig, MD, PhD, a current trainee in the Stanford Ophthalmology Advanced Research (SOAR) Residency Program, is the recipient of a Career Starter Grant from the Knights Templar Eye Foundation for his research on regeneration of retinal ganglion cells from endogenous progenitors.
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Direct-to-consumer genetic database used to identify AMD variants
CHICAGO — Researchers used a direct-to-consumer genetic testing service to identify patients with CFH Y402H and ARMS2 A69S alleles, the genetic variants most commonly associated with an increased risk for developing age-related macular degeneration, a speaker said here.