Xavier Galezowski (1832-1907) was born in Poland, received his first MD degree in St. Petersburg, Russia, and a second MD degree in Paris. He established an important ophthalmologic clinic in Paris, which trained many prominent ophthalmologists and treated numerous patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGraefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol
November 1997
Doc Ophthalmol
April 1998
Paul-Ferdinand Gachet was a close friend and physician of many famous artists who lived in France toward the end of the 19th century. He was van Gogh's last physician, and Vincent painted Gachet's portrait on two occasions. The first of these paintings has become the most expensive painting ever sold at a public auction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe retina, 350 microns thick membrane, has to transform the light stimulus into visual data. Cones and rods are essential to this phototransduction. Retina structure is now well explored using investigations such as echography, and angiography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA familial association between juvenile macular dystrophy and congenital hypotrichosis is described in two siblings aged 25 and 23 years. We put forward arguments for locating the retinal alteration at the level of the retinal pigment epithelium and suggest that the hair disorder could be a Marie-Unna type hypotrichosis. This association is transmitted as an autosomal recessive condition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFundus flavimaculatus with macular dystrophy is an autosomal recessive disease responsible for a progressive loss of visual acuity in adulthood, with pigmentary changes of the macula, perimacular flecks, and atrophy of the retinal pigmentary epithelium. Since this condition shares several clinical features with Stargardt disease, which has been mapped to chromosome 1p21-p13, we tested the disease for linkage to chromosome 1p. We report here the mapping of the disease locus to chromosome 1p13-p21, in the genetic interval defined by loci D1S435 and D1S415, in four multiplex families (maximum lod score 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurv Ophthalmol
May 1995
The author recalls his medical/ophthalmologic education and his career and travels during the middle decades of this century. He provides colorful descriptions of his professors, friends and colleagues throughout the world, highlighting not only their accomplishments, but also their personalities. Special tribute is given to his dear friend, Dr.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors highlight the political and scientific landmarks in 18th century France; the Revolution of 1789 had positive effects, in that it marked the accession of the French middle-class to political power and enabled the promotion of young scientists without consideration of social class or fortune; it had negative effects, in that France lost the scientific edge it had gained when all existing chairs in ophthalmology were abolished. The status of ophthalmology and of physiological optics in the 18th century are discussed, with a brief mention of the most important innovators in the field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull Mem Acad R Med Belg
January 1994
History reveals that doctor Carl Theodor, Duke in Bavaria, was an exceptional man in many ways if we consider his professional qualities and his sense of responsibilities. Thoroughly humane, and desirous of living very close to his contemporaries, he had to overcome numerous obstacles which hampered his medical destiny. His humanitarian achievements are important and may have influenced his daughter, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth, and developed her passion for healthcare concerning injured and sick persons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe latest studies on diabetic retinopathy reveal important clinical and therapeutic advances. From a clinical point of view, diverse methods of examination have enabled to study the primary damages of the pigmentary epithelium in cases of diabetic retinopathy in the young at the age of puberty and post-puberty. Moreover, neuro-functional exploration discloses the visual alterations which could not be objectified with classical methods of examination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe term 'choroidal vascular ischaemia' refers to all the choroido-retinal changes which follow an acute or chronic circulatory disorder in the arterial capillary or venous network of the choroid. However, different clinical syndromes can be observed according to the type of vessel which is occluded, the origin and rate of development of the process. Experimentation on animals, especially on monkeys and observations on those with limited retinal pigmentation has enabled us to study the anatomy of the choroidal circulation and the changes found in choroidal vascular ischaemia following capillary embolism or thrombosis after laser.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurvey of the development of heliocautery from Antiquity to the 18th century. In art, photocoagulatin of a human eye (in order to destruct it) is, for the first time, represented in 1817 by Hieronymus Hess of Basel. A full account is given of (a) Wilhelm Werneck's therapeutic coagulations (1835): rupturing of cataract by focussed light (sun, phosphorus); (b) Maximilian Adolf Langenbeck's "insolation" of corneal, pupillary and retinal lesions and of traumatic cataract (1859); (c) Vinzenz Czerny's coagulation experiments on the retina of various animals (1867, 1882).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe author describes different cases of alterations of the pigmentary epithelium observed in several patients as soon as their initial lifetime. He insists on the difficulty to classify all these cases from a clinical and evolutive point of view.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe damage of the choroidal membrane may be differently interpreted in diverse stages of diabetic retinopathy. As a general rule, the macular edema seems much more related to a retinal than to a choroidal alteration. However, during the evolution, some pathological patterns seem to be linked with the choroidal alteration.
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