Latest Updates
-
Paneer Lababdar Recipe: Creamy Restaurant-Style Curry Made Easy -
Mouni Roy’s Cannes 2026 Patola Gown Took 300 Hours To Craft — The Story Of Gujarat’s GI-Tagged Weave -
Bread Pizza Recipe: Your Instant Snack Hack -
India's Hottest City Hit 47.6°C Today — This Is What Heatstroke Looks Like -
Exclusive: Rubina Dilaik Said Yes To The Ward In Seconds: Here's The Raw Truth Behind Why -
PM Modi Turns Viral ‘Melodi’ Nickname Real With Melody Gift To Meloni, Inside India’s Iconic Toffee Origin -
Superglue, A Potato, A Plastic Bag: The Dangerous DIY Contraception Cases That Shocked Doctors -
One Pot Easy Meal: Delicious Veg Pulav Recipe -
'Melodi' Moment Breaks The Internet: PM Modi Meets Giorgia Meloni In Rome, Colosseum Diplomacy Explained -
Remembering Bipin Chandra Pal On His 94th Death Anniversary With 10 Bold Quotes On Swaraj And Identity
Super-Fast Laser For Eye Surgery Developed
{image- www.boldsky.com} Initial results of a two-year pilot program being run at the University of Michigan Kellogg Eye Center suggest that a super-fast and high-tech laser developed for use in eye surgery can allow patients to have better vision and a faster recovery.
The Femtosecond Laser Assisted Keratoplasty (FLAK) study is based on the use of the ultrafast or femtosecond laser in performing full thickness corneal transplants.
"We hope that with the use of the femtosecond laser, patients will have better vision, faster recovery of vision, and stronger wound construction, which will allow them to be more resistant to injury in the future," says Dr. Shahzad I. Mian, assistant professor in the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences at Kellogg, and principle investigator of the FLAK study.
"The advantage of this laser is that it allows the surgeon to focus the laser energy at a particular depth and then rapidly cut the tissue at that depth without causing any additional injury to the surrounding tissue. It also allows the surgeon to pattern these cuts into shapes - such as a mushroom, a top hat or a zig zag – that allow for better customized overlap between the donor's corneal tissue and the patient's corneal tissue," the researcher adds.
Mian says that the study results for corneal transplant surgery have been very encouraging to date due to the speed and precision of the femtosecond laser.
According to him, if the results hold true, a larger, multi-center clinical trial comparing this procedure to the traditional method of performing transplants could follow.
Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for general informational and educational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.



Click it and Unblock the Notifications