Search

Search results

1901 results found

Evangelos Gragoudas, MD, Presents Gass Lecture

Evangelos Gragoudas, MD, presented the J. Donald M. Gass lecture at the Retina Society Annual Meeting in Paris, France on October 8, 2015. A pioneer and a world authority on the diagnosis and management of intraocular tumors and retinal disease, Dr. Gragoudas and colleagues developed the use of...

Joan W. Miller, MD, FARVO Elected to the National Academy of Medicine

BOSTON (October 19, 2015) -- Joan Whitten Miller, MD, Henry Willard Williams Professor of Ophthalmology and Chair of Ophthalmology at Harvard Medical School, and Chief of Ophthalmology at Massachusetts Eye and Ear and Massachusetts General Hospital, has been elected to membership in the prestigious...

Clifford Kim Receives RPB Award

Clifford Kim received the RPB Medical Student Fellowship in the amount of $30,000 over one year. This award allows gifted medical students to devote time to the pursuit of a research project. Further Reading: Mass. Eye and Ear Press Release

Mass. Eye and Ear in Boston Magazine

Mass. Eye and Ear was included in Boston Magazine's "Boston Hospitals with N iche Specialties," as the only hospital with a 24/7 eye emergency room in New England. See the full article in Boston Magazine.

Original Research Article Accepted by PLOS One

Congratulations to Dr. Matyal and her team for the acceptance of their original research article by PLOS ONE. The article, titled 'Early Cellular Changes in the Ascending Aorta and Myocardium in a Swine Model of Metabolic Syndrome' was able to show that preclinical metabolic syndrome initiates pro...

Eye Insights No. 2: Fueling a Revolution in Retinal Care

The January 2015 issue of HMS Ophthalmology's clinical advisory newsletter, Eye Insights, is now available. This issue describes biomedical breakthroughs in anti-VEGF research that have changed how we diagnose, treat, and save vision for patients with retinal disease. See the full text here (HTML &...

Brains of veterans near bomb blasts appear to age faster.

U.S. veterans who were nearby to bomb blasts in Iraq and Afghanistan appear to experience faster brain aging, according to a new study. The study, which is the first to examine the longer-term brain health of veteransexposed to bomb blasts, was published this week in Brain: A Journal of Neurology....