Showing posts with label eye health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eye health. Show all posts

Friday, July 18, 2014

REPOST: Novartis-Google team on lens for diabetes, vision issues

 Among the new technologies in eye care that is in development is the "smart contact lens". Read this article from USAtoday.com for more details.

Image Source: usatoday.com

Google is teaming up with pharmaceutical giant Novartis to develop a "smart" contact lens intended to replace reading glasses for people who can't read without them and glucose monitors for those with diabetes.

For people with vision problems, the device would work like the autofocus of a camera, allowing them to focus on close-up things like the words in a book. It will be designed to work as a contact lens that is changed out regularly, or as an intra-ocular lens, permanently inserted into the eye during cataract surgery.

For diabetics, the lenses would replace regular finger sticks designed to read out a person's blood glucose level. Instead, the lens will "read" glucose levels in tears, sending information wirelessly to a handheld device that will warn patients when they need to eat or lower their glucose levels.

"These are issues that have been unmet medical needs for quite some time," said Novartis CEO Joseph Jimenez.

Novartis' eye-care division Alcon, based in Texas, inked the deal today to do the development work, along with Google X, an innovation lab at the information company's Mountain View, Calif., headquarters, which had previously announced plans to make "smart" contacts.

Jimenez, said he hopes the contact will be the first of many technologies the two companies develop together.

"It was very clear that there could be a very nice synergistic value between bringing high tech together with biology to solve some of the biggest health care issues that we're facing," Jimenez said.

The work is still preliminary, he said, with testing in people expected to begin next year. It will be a few years before the lens can be considered for regulatory approval and reach customers.

He said a price had not been decided for the lenses, and would not disclose how much the two companies will be investing in the project other than to say that it will be "commensurate with the business opportunity."

More than 1.7 billion people worldwide have presbyopia, the medical term for eyes that lose their ability to focus up-close with age, and more than 380 million have diabetes, he said.

Diabetes experts said they see two potential problems with glucose-monitoring lenses.

First, it's not clear whether glucose in tears, which the device would measure, changes in sync with the glucose in blood.

"There are no available data to show any reliability of this sensor," said Robert Ratner, chief scientific and medical Officer of the American Diabetes Association. "Is this going to be a situation where you have to change the contact once a day, once a week or once an hour? All of these are unknowns."

Second, diabetics are most at risk for crashing blood sugar levels at night while they're sleeping. But that's also when most people take out their contacts.

"Any type of contact device is going to need to be something that can be worn overnight if it's going to be able to realize the benefits people need, which is to get warning alarms when their glucoses are going out of range overnight," said Howard Wolpert, director of the Joslin Institute for Technology Translation at the Harvard-affiliated Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston.

For aging eyes, there are also many other alternatives to the contacts, from glasses to low-tech contacts to LASIK surgery, said Kerry Assil, an ophthalmic surgeon in Los Angeles.

But still, he said, if the "smart" contacts can be made to work, it would be a boon to patients. "Any new thing that can provide people with a slightly enhanced visual clarity, reduced side effects and so forth, tremendously elevates their sense of well being and their sense of confidence."

Dr. Hitesh K. Patel is an Edison-based opthalmologist and founder of the Patel Eye Associates. Follow this Twitter account to learn more about the latest trends in eye care.

Monday, June 3, 2013

REPOST: Emo PSA: Your stupid haircut could be ruining your eye

Move the bangs away if you want to protect your eyes from damage.  This article from Time provides more details: 


The trademark emo haircut — long bangs swept dramatically over one eye — is a symbol of your deep inner pain, like when you forgot those My Chemical Romance lyrics and all your emo friends laughed at you, or that time your MySpace page wouldn’t load. But beware! According to one expert quoted in one newspaper, there’s a danger of physical pain as well: those haircuts may be bad for your sad, beautiful eyes.
Image Source: Newsfeed.time.com
Andrew Hogan, a national executive member of Australia’s Optometrists’ Association, told the Daily Telegraph that the floppy, Justin Bieber–esque ’do could lead to amblyopia — lazy eye. “If a young emo chap has a fringe covering one eye all the time, that eye won’t see a lot of detail … And if it happens from a young age, that eye can become amblyotic,” he said. According to Hogan, the asymmetrical fringe acts as an eye patch: “If you walk around with an eye patch on all day, then that eye will end up seeing more poorly than the other eye.”

“Veteran hairdresser” Roseanne Anderson also suggests that the fringe poses risks to young people’s posture, because of the incessant head tilting and hair flicking that inevitably ensues:

“I have to wonder how they don’t get a stiff neck … I have seen lots of fashions come and go — but really when I think about it, this is probably the only hairstyle in my 40 years of hairdressing that could be a health hazard.”

Good thing other eye professionals say the whole thing is complete and utter nonsense. “This is a crazy idea, the concept of this blocking vision and causing problems with sight,” Auckland-based ophthalmologist Justin Mora told TV New Zealand. “It’s just silly.” But maybe get a haircut, just in case.


Dr. Hitesh K. Patel of Edison is an eye specialist.  Visit this Facebook page for more about eye health.


Thursday, May 9, 2013

Healthy beauty: How women's makeup habits risk eye health



Image Source: totallytamryn.com


Mascara, eye shadow, and eyeliner make your eyes look dramatic, and your overall look appealing. However, bacteria and fungi can accumulate in your cosmetics overtime. When you apply makeup around your eye area, you may unsuspectingly transfer these microorganisms into your eyes. Your eyes are delicate, and they need a breather from your eye makeup from time to time. Should you really need to make those peepers pretty, always remember to practice safety when using makeup.

Certain makeup habits can damage the eyes, and Canoe Health lists some of them:

Using products that you bought three months ago. You should ditch old makeup, especially liquid eyeliners and mascaras. Mascara can be a breeding ground for bacteria because it is water-based. Germs can build up on the mascara wand, which, when replaced inside the tube, can spread the bacteria all over the mascara mixture. The eyes can get infected when old mascara is applied on the lashes.


Image Source: newfashsite.com


Using makeup products from the salon. The adhesives for an eyelash extension may harm your eyes. Likewise, the cosmetics used in salons may be old products or have been used by several clients already.

Using glittery and flaky products. Eye cosmetics that contain glitter, have become flaky, or have kohl can be irritants. Women should also double-check the makeup they are about to buy because some kohl-based products contain lead.


Image Source: examiner.com


Cosmetics can leave deposits on your eyes, affecting your vision. To avoid this, carefully and gently wash off your eye makeup each night before bed to make sure that your skin is free from makeup residue.

For more helpful information on how to take care of your eyes, visit this Facebook page for Dr. Hitesh K. Patel, Edison-based ophthalmologist.