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News Update Service
Wednesday, January 14, 2009 : 0400 Hrs       

Sci. & Tech.
Space-age fibre-optic probe to help detect cataract early 

Washington (IANS): A compact fibre-optic probe developed for the space 
programme is proving itself as the first non-invasive early detection device for
cataract, the leading cause of vision loss worldwide. 

Researchers from the National Eye Institute (NEI), and the National Aeronautics 
and Space Administration (NASA) collaborated to develop a simple, safe eye
test for measuring a protein related to cataract formation. 

If subtle protein changes can be detected before a cataract develops, people 
may be able to avert the risk by cutting down exposure to sunlight, quitting
smoking, stopping certain medications and controlling diabetes. 

"By the time the eye's lens appears cloudy from a cataract, it is too late to 
reverse or medically treat this process," said Manuel B. Datiles III, NEI
medical officer and co-author lead author of the clinical study. 

"This technology can detect the earliest damage to lens proteins, triggering an 
early warning for cataract formation and blindness." 

The new device is based on a laser light technique called dynamic light 
scattering (DLS). It was initially developed to analyse the growth of protein 
crystals
in a zero-gravity space environment. 

The DLS technique will now assist vision scientists in looking at long-term 
lens changes due to aging, smoking, diabetes, LASIK surgery, eye drops for 
treating
glaucoma, and surgical removal of the vitreous gel within the eye, a procedure 
known to cause cataracts within six months to one year. 

It may also help in the early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease, in which an 
abnormal protein may be found in the lens. In addition, NASA researchers will
continue to use the device to look at the impact of long-term space travel on 
the visual system. 

NASA's Rafat R. Ansari, senior scientist at the John H. Glenn Research Centre 
and the study co-author, brought the technology's possible clinical applications
to the attention of NEI vision researchers when he learned that his father's 
cataracts were caused by changes in lens proteins. 

Several proteins are involved in cataract formation, but one known as 
alpha-crystallin serves as the eye's own anti-cataract molecule. 

Alpha-crystallin binds to other proteins when they become damaged, thus 
preventing them from bunching together to form a cataract. However, humans are 
born
with a fixed amount of alpha-crystallin, so if the supply becomes depleted due 
to radiation exposure, smoking, diabetes or other causes, a cataract can
result. 

"We have shown that this non-invasive technology that was developed for the 
space program can now be used to look at the early signs of protein damage due
to oxidative stress, a key process involved in many medical conditions, 
including age-related cataract and diabetes, as well as neurodegenerative 
diseases
such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's," said Ansari. 

"By understanding the role of protein changes in cataract formation, we can use 
the lens not just to look at eye disease, but also as a window into the
whole body." 

The recent NEI-NASA clinical trial, looked at 380 eyes of people aged seven to 
86 who had lenses ranging from clear to severe cloudiness from cataract.


Researchers used the DLS device to shine a low-power laser light through the 
lenses. 

They had previously determined alpha-crystallin's light-scattering ability, 
which was then used to detect and measure the amount of alpha-crystallin in
the lenses, said a NEI-NASA release. 

They found that as cloudiness increased, alpha-crystallin in the lenses 
decreased. Alpha-crystallin amounts also decreased as the participants' ages 
increased,
even when the lenses were still transparent. These age-related, pre-cataract 
changes would remain undetected by currently available imaging tools. 

These findings were reported in the December Archives of Ophthalmology. 


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