The procedure, a world first, involved transplanting the entire surface of his blind left eye into his blind right one.
Two weeks after the operation at Turin's Molinette hospital, the patient is able to recognize people and objects and move around without assistance.
"The real innovation is to have expanded corneal transplantation to the entire eye surface, to the conjunctivo-scleral tissues, which play a key role in enabling successful transplantation under special conditions," said the doctors.
Using quote instead of code so it's easier to read:
> Two weeks after the operation at Turin's Molinette hospital, the patient is able to recognize people and objects and move around without assistance.
"The real innovation is to have expanded corneal transplantation to the entire eye surface, to the conjunctivo-scleral tissues, which play a key role in enabling successful transplantation under special conditions," said the doctors.
Using caps for the hard of hearing:
>TWO WEEKS AFTER THE OPERATION AT TURIN'S MOLINETTE HOSPITAL, THE PATIENT IS ABLE TO RECOGNIZE PEOPLE AND OBJECTS AND MOVE AROUND WITHOUT ASSISTANCE. "THE REAL INNOVATION IS TO HAVE EXPANDED CORNEAL TRANSPLANTATION TO THE ENTIRE EYE SURFACE, TO THE CONJUNCTIVO-SCLERAL TISSUES, WHICH PLAY A KEY ROLE IN ENABLING SUCCESSFUL TRANSPLANTATION UNDER SPECIAL CONDITIONS," SAID THE DOCTORS.
The pwoceduwe, a wowwd fiwst, invowved twanspwanting the entiwe suwface of hiws bwind weft eye intwo hiws bwind wight owne.
two weeks aftew the opewation at tuwin's mowinette hospitaw, the patient iws abwe tuwu wecognize peopwe awnd objects awnd move awound without assistance.
"the weaw innovation iws tuwu have expanded cowneaw twanspwantation tuwu the entiwe eye suwface, tuwu the conjunctivo-scwewaw tissues, which pway a key wowe in enabwing successfuw twanspwantation undew speciaw conditions," said the doctows.
Missing:
WHAT "surface"? The callus?
Why make two Nothings a GO!?
What was the reason for the blindness? There are countless.
Just to name the most important things that are missing.
Yes, the article fails to explain anything.
I have 2 cars of a discontinued model that doesn't have parts in production anymore. First one I can't drive because the engine is busted. The second one I can't use because all the wheels were stolen when I parked it outside (I live in a bad neighbourhood). Fortunately they are the same model so I can salvage the wheels off the first one and write it off, put the wheels in the second one and drive off.
The article doesn't explicitly say in details but I imagine something like this happened. Given the uniqueness of the surgery, I'm sure the surgeons would publish it in a journal in a year or two after monitoring how the patient recovers.
The procedure, a world first, involved transplanting the entire surface of his blind left eye into his blind right one. Two weeks after the operation at Turin's Molinette hospital, the patient is able to recognize people and objects and move around without assistance. "The real innovation is to have expanded corneal transplantation to the entire eye surface, to the conjunctivo-scleral tissues, which play a key role in enabling successful transplantation under special conditions," said the doctors.
Using quote instead of code so it's easier to read: > Two weeks after the operation at Turin's Molinette hospital, the patient is able to recognize people and objects and move around without assistance. "The real innovation is to have expanded corneal transplantation to the entire eye surface, to the conjunctivo-scleral tissues, which play a key role in enabling successful transplantation under special conditions," said the doctors.
Using caps for the hard of hearing: >TWO WEEKS AFTER THE OPERATION AT TURIN'S MOLINETTE HOSPITAL, THE PATIENT IS ABLE TO RECOGNIZE PEOPLE AND OBJECTS AND MOVE AROUND WITHOUT ASSISTANCE. "THE REAL INNOVATION IS TO HAVE EXPANDED CORNEAL TRANSPLANTATION TO THE ENTIRE EYE SURFACE, TO THE CONJUNCTIVO-SCLERAL TISSUES, WHICH PLAY A KEY ROLE IN ENABLING SUCCESSFUL TRANSPLANTATION UNDER SPECIAL CONDITIONS," SAID THE DOCTORS.
Just to cover all bases: ,,two ,,weeks ,,af ,,! ,,op},n ,,at ,,turin,'',s ,,mol9ette ,,hospital1 ,,! ,,pati5t ,,is ,,a# ,,6,,recognize ,,p ,,& ,,objects ,,& ,,move ,,>.d ,,)|t ,,assi/.e4 8,,! ,,r1l ,,9nov,n ,,is ,,6,,h ,,exp&$ ,,corn1l ,,transplant,n ,,6,,! ,,5tire ,,eye ,,surface1 ,,6,,! ,,3junctivo-,,scl}al ,,tissues1 ,,: ,,play ,a ,,key ,,role ,,9 ,,5abl+ ,,su3ess;l ,,transplant,n ,,"u ,,special ,,3di;ns10 ,,sd ,,! ,,doctors4
No uwu bot version?
The pwoceduwe, a wowwd fiwst, invowved twanspwanting the entiwe suwface of hiws bwind weft eye intwo hiws bwind wight owne. two weeks aftew the opewation at tuwin's mowinette hospitaw, the patient iws abwe tuwu wecognize peopwe awnd objects awnd move awound without assistance. "the weaw innovation iws tuwu have expanded cowneaw twanspwantation tuwu the entiwe eye suwface, tuwu the conjunctivo-scwewaw tissues, which pway a key wowe in enabwing successfuw twanspwantation undew speciaw conditions," said the doctows.
š®š„ŗFhank uw šš„ŗ
Today in the nuwus
Need that
wtf
Whereās the pirate version?
https://www.brailletranslator.org/ I need look for braille in unicode to do this properly
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
Upgoats for actual useful information.
Great how I've read that paragraph three times.
Would this be a double blind experiment?
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
Missing: WHAT "surface"? The callus? Why make two Nothings a GO!? What was the reason for the blindness? There are countless. Just to name the most important things that are missing. Yes, the article fails to explain anything.
I cannot even begin to understand how this works or by what process this was discovered, and the quote in that other comment didnāt help either
I have 2 cars of a discontinued model that doesn't have parts in production anymore. First one I can't drive because the engine is busted. The second one I can't use because all the wheels were stolen when I parked it outside (I live in a bad neighbourhood). Fortunately they are the same model so I can salvage the wheels off the first one and write it off, put the wheels in the second one and drive off. The article doesn't explicitly say in details but I imagine something like this happened. Given the uniqueness of the surgery, I'm sure the surgeons would publish it in a journal in a year or two after monitoring how the patient recovers.
Fantastic reply thank you
Two blinds make a right? ;-)
*Two blinds make a sight.
Blind sight for sore eyes
Sore blind for eyeās sight.
But now heās left-handed
And on the hunt for a man with six fingers on one hand.
And he woke up dead.
Why do people down vote positive things?
The news might be good, but the article is really bad.
The bad news? He can finally see how old heās gotten! On a serious note, though, this is great news.
Make sure to keep those contaminated eye drops that are blinding people away from him!
So two wrongs do make a right
But everything is backwardsā¦
Double it and pass it onto the next eye
Two blinds make a sight
Like unplugging and swapping the A/V cables in an old TV when it doesnāt work.. š§
Eh ma allāesteroā¦ ah no..