|
Eye surgeons from the Singapore National Eye
Centre together with a dental team from the National Dental Centre
successfully completed the first stage of a revolutionary two stage
surgical procedure to help a blind boy to see. This is believed
to be the first operation of its kind in South-East Asia.
The patient, Luck Pewnual, a 19 year-old boy
from Thailand, completely lost his sight in both eyes six years
ago from a rare allergic reaction. He is currently recovering well
after a 6-hour operation performed at the Singapore National Eye
Centre on Saturday, 21 February 2004.
 |
1. |
opening up one eye and removing
the entire inner surface of his eyelids, his corneal surface,
and all scar tissue from his previous eye injury |
| |
2. |
removing the inner mucosal
lining of the cheek and transplanting it onto the new surface
of the eye |
| |
3. |
removing a canine tooth and
part of the adjacent bone and attached ligaments from his jaw
(interestingly, the canine tooth is also known as the "eye-tooth") |
| |
4. |
fashioning a bolt-shaped
structure from this tooth-bone complex to receive a plastic
optical cylinder which is cemented into place |
| |
5. |
implanting the tooth-bone-cylinder
complex into his cheek to grow a new blood supply |
Stage 2 is expected to take place in June this
year, and will involve 2 separate procedures. First, the cheek mucosal
lining over the eye will be opened, and a circular opening made
in his cornea to receive the implant. The inner contents of the
eye will also be removed at the same time. Secondly, the living
tooth-bone-cylinder complex will be removed from the cheek, and
placed within the eye, and the mucosal cheek lining will be replaced
over the implant. At the end of the procedure, light can now enter
through the plastic cylinder, and he will be able to see through
this cylinder with good vision.
This surgery is a last ditch attempt for those
who lose their sight when their corneas and front part of the eye
and eyelids are severely damaged. Patients selected for surgery
will include those cases of complete blindness in which conventional
corneal transplants will not work. If successful, more OOKP surgery
is being planned, and a list of local and regional patients is awaiting
the possibility of surgery with this new technique. The cost for
the first operation is $9,000 for foreign patients. The second stage
is expected to cost $6,000.
The Singapore National Eye Centre would like
to thank the Singapore General Hospital management and staff for
the inpatient care and services rendered during his post-operative
recovery.
1. OOKP Surgeons
- Assoc Prof Donald Tan
Deputy Director, Singapore National
Eye Centre (SNEC)
Head and Senior Consultant, Corneal & External Eye Disease
Service, SNEC
Director, Singapore Eye Research Institute
Head, Dept of Ophthalmology, National University of Singapore
- Dr Andrew Tay
Consultant, Dept of Oral and Maxillofacial
Surgery
National Dental Centre
- Dr Julian Theng
Consultant, Corneal & External
Eye Disease Service
Singapore National Eye Centre
|
2. OOKP Anaesthetist
- Dr V Sivagnanaratnam
Visiting Consultant Anaesthetist,
SNEC
Emeritus Consultant Anaesthetist, Changi General Hospital
|
4. NDC Nursing Team
5. OOKP Surgical Advisor:
- Dr Christopher Liu
Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon, Sussex
Eye Hospital, Brighton, England
Visiting Consultant, SNEC
|
The Singapore National Eye centre is the designated national eye
centre within the public healthcare network that provides specialist
eye care to 70 percent of patients in the public sector. It now
attends to 250,000 outpatient visits and performs 12,000 major eye
surgeries and 11,000 laser procedures annually. The high quality
and volume of SNEC's services place the institution as a leading
eye centre in the Asia-Pacific region and beyond. Please see enclosed
VISION booklet for further information on the SNEC.
The National Dental Centre (NDC) is the nation's referral
centre for specialist oral healthcare services. In addition to providing
services in the areas of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery, Orthodontics
and Restorative Dentistry, NDC's specialists also collaborate with
other medical specialists to manage patients with complex oral needs.
Some of these complex higher-end procedures include oral rehabilitation
for patients needing customised implants or undergoing radiotherapy
treatment for head & neck cancers, corrective surgeries for
patients with dentofacial deformities, and nerve injury repair procedures.
The OOKP procedure is another demonstration of the Centre's capabilities,
targeted at providing excellent clinical expertise for patients
both in Singapore and the region. For more information on NDC, please
refer to the enclosed Fact Sheet or visit website www.ndc.com.sg
Singapore National Eye Centre, National Dental
Centre and Singapore General Hospital are members of Singapore Health
Services (SingHealth)
For further information, please contact:
Ravi Chandran
Corporate Communications Executive
Singapore National Eye Centre
Tel: 65 6 322 8394
E-mail: ravi@snec.com.sg
Date : 25 February 2004
|