窪蹋勛圖厙

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  • Department of Ophthalmology
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The Forest, the Trees and the Leaves

from on .

This story, written by Elaine Vitone,in the Winter 2019/20 edition of Pitt Med.

When was a PhD student researching glaucomaa group of disorders marked by damage to the optic nervehe and his advisor homed in on those dying nerve fibers for their studies. But soon, they realized they couldnt understand what was going on there without also checking in on the optic nerves nearby neighbors. So they widened their scope a tad.

Then we found, of course, that no, thats not enough, Sigal says. You have to look around that area, then you have to look around that. So they kept expanding their scope.

In time, he learned that changes within the eye dont happen in a vacuum. Hence, Sigal, founding director of the Laboratory of Ocular Biomechanics in the 窪蹋勛圖厙 of 窪蹋勛圖厙 , studies the whole enchiladathe dynamics of the complex organ in its entirety.

Traditional imaging methods used to make this difficult, he says. Imaging the delicate tissues in the back of the eye was slow going and very uncomfortable for patients. But in the last couple of decades, a 3D imaging technology called optical coherence tomography, co-invented by Pitts former ophthalmology chair Joel Schuman, changed everything in ophthalmology, Sigal says. Or at least in how ophthalmology sees the eye, so to speak.

Previously, imaging in this field was limited to either low-res views of the big picture or very hi-res views of cells and their components, and nothing in between. To make that sought-after middle ground possible, Sigals lab has employed a technology of its own designa variation of whats known as polarized light microscopy (PLM)yielding new insights into the organs inner workings.

On a recent afternoon, at his computer in the Eye and Ear Institute, he clicks through images of animal eye interiors, brilliantly rendered with stunning detail, like postcards from a dense, dayglow thicket.

Now we can see theleavesand the forest, he says.

Read the rest of the story in.