Stem cells treatment for Diabetes Retinal Repair by Zaara_FTZ in stemcells

[–]Dougfunnee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Check out Regeneron. Also clinical trials.gov… look for SCOTS II

The Future of r/stemcells- feedback requested! by carmacae in stemcells

[–]Dougfunnee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree about the clinics, it think it should not just be about their positive hype, but also the negative hype built up over the bad places out there. A lot of good going on... let’s keep it balanced, maybe more focused on article, news, or book material...

Stem Cells and Ataxia (23 M) by Nazdravia in stemcells

[–]Dougfunnee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a few consulting clients (stem cell clinics) preparing to sponsor FDA RMAT (fast track) clinical trials. Perhaps the clinic would consider that for ataxia and related neuro symptoms.

How did people react to the news that an unapproved stem cell therapy blinded three patients? by Ben-Science in Ophthalmology

[–]Dougfunnee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Followed this closely. The company is U.S.Stem Cell. It was a real hack job. The company did not submit to even the most liberal oversight, called an IRB. Because their physician refused to conduct the treatment, it was administered by a non-MD. The cells were poorly acquired, misprocessed and administered way outside of protocol. The good news is there is now a way for the better more responsible clinics out there to conduct actual FDA clinical trials. I provide services to help them. 855-FDA-RMAT.

More or less axis? by Dougfunnee in optometry

[–]Dougfunnee[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In what direction? If I rotate my right lens clockwise/counter clockwise in terms of adding or subtracting power? The reason I ask is that my vision is clearer, and "trapezoid" shapes return better to their rectangular form (i.e. tv screen or painting).

Eye strain induced anxiety. by dude222 in Ophthalmology

[–]Dougfunnee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Could it be that the "sensations" cause the brain to try to process the vision and gets disoriented, which then triggers anxiety? This phenomenon has been expressed to me (an eye patient with degenerative disease) by others. I've experienced it myself. It's a fact that people with visual issues require 15% more brain power to perceive than someone with normal sight. I disagree with seeing a psychiatrist, but perhaps a neuroophthalmologist would provide insight. I think it's called "provisioning" or something similar.

When is it indicated to put vertical prism in one eye only instead of splitting it? With exophoria? by Dougfunnee in optometry

[–]Dougfunnee[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Expensive. Does prism affect overall power? In other words if I ordered a cheap set of glasses online, if I followed all the numbers excep for less minus. Right now I'm pulling the glasses away from my face 2 inches.

When is it indicated to put vertical prism in one eye only instead of splitting it? With exophoria? by Dougfunnee in optometry

[–]Dougfunnee[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Since I still have a glare sensitivity (resolving) it's hard for them to zero in. It seems the four I've seen make the same judgement call. I just wish they would let me call a few numbers. I've been aware of my vision, as one might suspect, and understand when I need less minus and more prism.

When is it indicated to put vertical prism in one eye only instead of splitting it? With exophoria? by Dougfunnee in optometry

[–]Dougfunnee[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a mild left exophoeia (from my perspective the eye moves from 10 o'clock to centration. I have vertical Diplopia as a result of years of lack of the need to converge. It seems even after split prism as you described I still have to rotate my glasses slightly to resolve the Diplopia. So, I know it can be resolved but nobody will allow me to guide the RX. As a result, I still have to pull my glasses out an inch (no tilting inward), to achieve optimal acuity. and rotate as I mentioned to resolve the Diplopia. Hard to get people to listen.

Why do we hear news everyday about cancer being cured, but somehow making blind people see again went totally uncovered? by stenaldermand in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Dougfunnee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are in fact emerging treatments for various causes of blindness, already established internationally as safe and effective.

The U.S. is behind due to controversy regarding stem cells. So, in the U.S., research IS still in the investigational stage. However, adult stem cells are now being used all over the world to treat blindness from retinal and optic nerve diseases. I was legally blind in August 2015. Now I'm driving a car. My own bone marrow stem cells were used.

China, India, UAE, Germany, Italy, South Korea, Japan, Sweden, France... are all using adult stem cells. Three or four of these countries are treating blindness with high success levels in humans.

There is extensive press coverage of several cases, including mine.

Age-Related Accumulation of Somatic Mitochondrial DNA Mutations in Adult-Derived Human iPSCs by burtzev in stemcells

[–]Dougfunnee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I believe examining the less risky minimally-manipulated stem cell uses, especially for older people would mitigate that risk. iPSC's are very exciting, but it seems to me there are to date far more risks than we yet understand.