PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Against presbyopia

Researchers from the UPV, the UV and the AIKEN Foundation have designed the first totally transparent trifocal corneal inlay

Against presbyopia
2021-04-26
(Press-News.org) As a result of the work of five years of research, they have created the first trifocal corneal inlay that is also fully transparent. Such an inlay would allow good eyesight to presbyopic people of objects located at several distances: far, intermediate (computer, mobile devices) and near. Their work has been published in Nature group's Scientific Reports journal. "This inlay could be an alternative for those suffering from presbyopia who would rather not use glasses or contact lenses. Furthermore, it would be fully compatible with laser refractive surgery in myopic and hyperopic patients, as well as possible subsequent cataract interventions. We are suggesting something totally new that is also not incompatible with any other ocular therapy", highlights Juan Antonio Monsoriu, researcher at the Centre for Physical Technologies of the Universitat Politècnica de València. In this sense, Dr. Salvador García-Delpech, from the Aiken Foundation points out that this inlay, unlike others that currently exist, would not prevent subsequent study of the retina or macula and even surgical interventions as the case may be. He also adds that at this time, screens, mobile phones, electronic devices... have become a basic need in our everyday lives, and the number of patients who request to stop using glasses in their daily life is increasing. "Let's also take into account the face mask effect: many people cannot perform their job with foggy glasses due to the use of face masks and come looking for a practical solution to this problem," adds García-Delpech, referring to changes to which the population is being subjected in this "new normal". First totally transparent diffractive inlay The inlay consists of a diffractive lens made of a biocompatible material, "It is extremely thin - less than 5 microns - so it would be inlayed inside the stroma of the cornea, basically without affecting its structure, in a cavity created with a femtosecond laser. The lens is micro-perforated, which allows the flow of necessary nutrients in this part of the cornea", explains Walter D. Furlan, researcher at the Department of Optics and Optometry and Vision Sciences at the University of Valencia. But, the main novelty of the researchers' work goes further, as it is the first totally transparent diffractive inlay. Another characteristic that differentiates it from current inlays is that the area where the nutrients flow is greater. "This would reduce the chances of rejection once inlayed in the cornea of the patient", highlights Vicente Ferrando, also a researcher at the Center for Physical Technologies of the Universitat Politècnica de València. In addition, some of its design parameters may be adapted, which opens a new option for the treatment of presbyopia, with the development of fully customized trifocal corneal inlays, that is: tailored to each patient. It overcomes all the drawbacks of current corneal inlays Until now, the treatment for presbyopia has been through the use of glasses, bifocal and progressive contact lenses. There are multifocal intraocular lenses that generally replace the crystalline lens of the eye and intra-corneal inlays for surgical treatments. In the latter case, currently, according to the researchers, there are two types: small-aperture inlays and refractive inlays. "The first type produce an extension of the depth of focus with which intermediate vision is gained but their luminous efficiency, since it is partially opaque, is low. The second type achieve bifocality, so it has a good performance for nearsighted and farsighted individuals, although it loses quality at intermediate distances. Our design, according to the tests we have developed, overcomes all these handicaps", highlights Juan Antonio Monsoriu. In these tests, the UPV and UV team demonstrated the viability of this pioneering trifocal intracorneal inlay design. To do this, they assessed its optical quality by comparing it with another model currently used in clinical practice, first numerically with commercial software and then experimentally in an artificial eye using an adaptive optics based visual simulator. These trials are part of Diego Montagud Martínez's doctoral thesis, recently presented at the UPV. After the results obtained, the next step will be the beginning of the trials in patients -in a non-invasive way- with the aforementioned visual simulator and in collaboration with the AIKEN Ophthalmology Clinic.

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Against presbyopia

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Toward painless oral insulin administration

Toward painless oral insulin administration
2021-04-26
Researchers from Kumamoto University, Japan have found that DNP peptide, a small intestine-permeable cyclic peptide originally used as an insulin additive to improve absorption into the small intestinal, lowers blood glucose levels in mice. They also found that insulin can be administered orally by simply adding D-form DNP peptide (D-DNP) peptide to injectable insulin used in clinical practice. This study is expected to provide a basis for the development of oral insulin using DNP peptides. Insulin therapy by self-injected insulin is currently the best way to control ...

Researchers have identified a novel autoantigen in narcolepsy, a mimic of a protein from H1N1 virus

2021-04-26
Narcolepsy with cataplexy, or narcolepsy type 1 (NT1), is a rare and chronic neurological disease whose prevalence increased in children and adolescents after the administration of Pandemrix swine flu vaccine in 2009-2010. It is an autoimmune disease to which a specific inherited tissue type (HLA-DQB1*0602) predisposes people. The disease mechanism of NT1 was investigated in a collaborative study carried out by PhD student Arja Vuorela and university researcher Dr. Tobias Freitag, working in the research groups of Prof. Outi Vaarala and Prof. Seppo Meri. The study analyzed the cell-mediated immune response targeting ...

Researchers solve puzzle of origin and formation of specialized body plan in flatfishes

Researchers solve puzzle of origin and formation of specialized body plan in flatfishes
2021-04-26
The colonization of the seafloor is one of the most important events in evolutionary history, leading to an explosive radiation and large-scale morphological diversification of marine phyla. Flatfishes are one of the most successful groups of seafloor colonizers and have evolved the most specialized body plan (i.e., flat and asymmetrical) among the teleosts. However, the origin and formation mechanism of the peculiar morphology of flatfishes had long been unclear. Now, researchers from the Kunming Institute of Zoology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences ...

CRISPR/Cas-based diagnostics and gene therapy

2021-04-26
Announcing a new article publication for BIO Integration journal. In this mini review article the authors Meiyu Qiu and Pei Li from Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Daejeon, Republic of Korea summarize CRISPR/Cas-based Diagnostics and Gene Therapy. Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) technology, an easy, rapid, cost-effective, and precise gene-editing technique, has revolutionized diagnostics and gene therapy. Fast and accurate diagnosis of diseases is essential for point-of-care-testing (POCT) and specialized medical institutes. The CRISPR-associated (Cas) proteins system shed light on the new diagnostics methods at point-of-care (POC) owning to its advantages. In addition, CRISPR/Cas-based gene-editing ...

Can a newborn's brain discriminate speech sounds?

Can a newborns brain discriminate speech sounds?
2021-04-26
People's ability to perceive speech sounds has been deeply studied, specially during someone's first year of life, but what happens during the first hours after birth? Are babies born with innate abilities to perceive speech sounds, or do neural encoding processes need to age for some time? Researchers from the Institute of Neurosciences of the University of Barcelona (UBNeuro) and the Sant Joan de Déu Research Institute (IRSJD) have created a new methodology to try to answer this basic question on human development. The results, published in the Nature's open-access journal Scientific Reports, ...

Star light, star bright...as explained by math

Star light, star bright...as explained by math
2021-04-26
Not all stars shine brightly all the time. Some have a brightness that changes rhythmically due to cyclical phenomena like passing planets or the tug of other stars. Others show a slow change in this periodicity over time that can be difficult to discern or capture mathematically. KAUST's Soumya Das and Marc Genton have now developed a method to bring this evolving periodicity within the framework of mathematically "cyclostationary" processes. "It can be difficult to explain the variations of the brightness of variable stars unless they follow a regular pattern over time," says Das. "In this study we created methods that can explain the evolution of the brightness of a variable star, even if it ...

Toxic fluorocarbons - Not just in ski waxes

2021-04-26
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in ski wax have been receiving a lot of attention recently, but waxes constitute only a limited part of the problem of the PFAS group of toxicants. PFAS are a large group of man-made fluorocarbon toxicants, and you are most likely full of them. The toxic substances don't break down and instead accumulate, both in nature and in your body. "Due to their extensive use, humans and animals all over the world are continuously exposed to PFAS," says Håkon Austad Langberg, a PhD candidate at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) who has studied several of them in the last few years. PFAS are used in many different products beyond the fluorinated ski wax that ends up in the ground on ski slopes and on trails, ...

Six factors that determine success when working from home

2021-04-26
The corona pandemic has made us all focus on new ways of organizing our work. More and more companies and organizations around the world are considering how to meet their employees' demand for flexibility while at the same time reducing their office space and expensive rents. There are advantages and disadvantages to working from home, and many factors that affect the peoples' experience of it, such as their job function, age and seniority, whether they have children, whether they are a manager or employee, etc. Researchers from DTU Management have identified six main areas that company managers should focus on when developing strategies for remote work in future. Associate Professor at DTU Management Christine ...

Common inflammatory bowel disease treatment blunts COVID-19 vaccine response

2021-04-26
People who take a commonly-prescribed drug for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) should not assume they are protected after a first dose of COVID-19 vaccine, after a large-scale study found many had poor antibody responses. The research measured antibody responses after vaccination with the Pfizer/BioNTech or the Oxford/AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine in 865 people treated with infliximab, an anti-tumour necrosis factor (anti-TNF) biologic drug, prescribed to around two million people worldwide. Anti-TNF drugs are effective treatments for immune-mediated inflammatory ...

When Chauvet Cave artists created its artwork, the Pont d'Arc was already there

When Chauvet Cave artists created its artwork, the Pont dArc was already there
2021-04-26
The Chauvet Cave, which lies by the entrance to the Gorges of the Ardèche, is home to the world's oldest cave paintings, dating back 36,000 years. Their state of preservation and aesthetic qualities earned them a spot on the World Heritage List in 2014, 20 years after their discovery. The location of the cavern--surrounded by a remarkable landscape, next to the Pont d'Arc natural archway--raises the question of whether the people who executed these artworks looked and walked out upon the same landscape as today. Did they see the same natural archway? Scientists from the CNRS, Université Savoie Mont Blanc, and the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle1 ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Discovering hidden wrinkles in spacecraft membrane with a single camera

Women are less likely to get a lung transplant than men and they spend six weeks longer on the waiting list

Study sheds more light on life expectancy after a dementia diagnosis

Tesco urged to drop an “unethical” in-store infant feeding advice service pilot

Unraveling the events leading to multiple sex chromosomes using an echidna genome sequence

New AI platform identifies which patients are likely to benefit most from a clinical trial

Unique Stanford Medicine-designed AI predicts cancer prognoses, responses to treatment

A new ultrathin conductor for nanoelectronics

Synthetic chemicals and chemical products require a new regulatory and legal approach to safeguard children’s health

The genes that grow a healthy brain could fuel adult glioblastoma

New MSU study explains the delayed rise of plants, animals on land

UTA becomes one of largest natural history libraries

Number of autistic individuals enrolled in Medicaid and receiving federal housing support increased by 70% from 2008-16

St. Jude scientists create scalable solution for analyzing single-cell data

What is the average wait time to see a neurologist?

Proximity effect: Method allows advanced materials to gain new property

LJI researchers shed light on devastating blood diseases

ISS National Lab announces up to $650,000 in funding for technology advancement in low Earth orbit

Scientists show how sleep deprived brain permits intrusive thoughts

UC Irvine-led team discovers potential new therapeutic targets for Huntington’s disease

Paul “Bear” Bryant Awards 2024 Coach of the Year finalists named

Countering the next phase of antivaccine activism

Overcoming spasticity to help paraplegics walk again

Tiny microbe colonies communicate to coordinate their behavior

Researchers develop new technology for sustainable rare earth mining

Words activate hidden brain processes shaping emotions, decisions, and behavior

Understanding survival disparities in cancer care: A population-based study on mobility patterns

Common sleep aid may leave behind a dirty brain

Plant cells gain immune capabilities when it’s time to fight disease

Study sheds light on depression in community-dwelling older adults

[Press-News.org] Against presbyopia
Researchers from the UPV, the UV and the AIKEN Foundation have designed the first totally transparent trifocal corneal inlay