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Dec. 6, 1850: The Eyes Have It, Thanks to the Ophthalmoscope

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1850: German physician Hermann von Helmholtz, who devoted much of his career to studying the eye and the physics of vision and perception, demonstrates his ophthalmoscope to the Berlin

Physical Society. The invention revolutionizes ophthalmology.

Although von Helmholtz was not the first person to develop an ophthalmoscope, nor the first to examine the interior of the eye, his device was the first to be put to practical use.

The ophthalmoscope allows the examining doctor to look inside the patient’s eye at the lens, retina and optic nerve. It is the indispensable tool for diagnosing diseases of the eye, including glaucoma, and is used to screen for diabetic retinopathy, a condition in diabetics that can result in blindness. Caught early enough — and the ophthalmoscope is the method for pinning it down — the condition can be treated with laser surgery.

The ophthalmoscopes — both direct and indirect — most of us grew up with at the eye doctor’s office are still in use as a basic diagnostic tool. For more complicated procedures, scanning laser ophthalmoscopy is available.

While the ophthalmoscope made von Helmholtz famous, he distinguished himself in a number of scientific disciplines involving sensory perception, so much so that the Encyclopaedia Britannica wrote: “His life from first to last was one of devotion to science, and he must be accounted, on intellectual grounds, as one of the foremost men of the 19th century.”

Source: Medterms.com, Wikipedia

Photo: Hermann von Helmholtz
Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis

This article first appeared on Wired.com Dec. 6, 2007.

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Authors: Tony Long

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