Monday, December 29, 2014

Bionic eye implants let Canadian perceive light

For the first time ever in Canada, two patients with severely impaired vision have received “bionic eyes” that will not restore their sight, but will allow them to once again perceive light.

Doctors at Toronto Western Hospital say the two patients have retinitis pigmentosa, a degenerative disease in which the retina progressively becomes so damaged that most, if not all, vision is lost.

The bionic eye is known officially as the Argus II Retinal Prosthesis Device, and has two parts: The patient is outfitted with a pair of glasses with a built-in video camera, while a prosthesis the size of a pencil eraser is surgically implanted onto the retina.

Information from the camera is wirelessly transmitted to electrodes in the implant and converted to electrical pulses. These electrical pulses are turned into images, which are transmitted to the brain, Toronto Western’s Dr. Robert Devenyi explained to CTV News.

The patient must undergo intensive rehabilitation to learn how to process these images, he said.
The device stimulates the retina the same way that light normally does, just electronically, Devenyi said. “It really allows us to give vision to people who have no vision, and have no options for any type of rehabilitation,” Devenyi told CTV.

One of the Canadian patients is Orly Shamir, who had some residual vision as a child, but for the past dozen or so years could not see anything.

“After surgery and recovery, it’s like going back to childhood,” Shamir told CTV News Channel Tuesday afternoon.

Doctors tested Shamir’s vision before her surgery, and she was unable to detect a moving square on a computer screen. She was re-tested two weeks ago, and was able to detect the square, as well as the movement of a line across the screen.

“For me, it was very emotional because before I could not see any of it and now I can,” she said.

She was also able to see black and white stripes on a square board.

Shamir’s rehabilitation is ongoing. “I’m really excited about what’s to come,” she said.

Just last week, a patient who lost his vision to retinitis pigmentosa three decades ago had his bionic eye activated at Duke University Eye Center. Larry Hester was only the seventh patient in the U.S. to receive the bionic eye. When doctors activated the device, he exclaimed “Yes!”

Thursday, December 18, 2014

6 Surprising Health Benefits of Pumpkin


We’re in the middle of a full-on flavor takeover. There’s pumpkin in your bagels, beer and coffee. While most pumpkin-flavored treats should be added to the once-in-a-while list, pumpkin itself (not to be confused with artificial pumpkin spice flavoring) is actually one of the healthier foods of the season. Here are six reasons it’s OK to be totally obsessed with this season’s superfood.
1. Feel Fuller Pumpkin seeds pack about 1.7 grams of dietary fiber per ounce, while mashed pumpkin has only 50 calories per cup and 3 grams of fiber. “Fiber helps keep you fuller longer, which keeps your appetite at bay so you eat less overall,” says nutrition and fitness expertJJ Virgin, author of The Virgin Diet.
2. Boost Vision A cup of cubed pumpkin contains almost twice the recommended daily intake of vitamin A, which promotes good vision, especially in dim light, according to the National Institutes of Health. It has also been found to slow the decline of retinal function in those with retinitis pigmentosa, a degenerative eye disease that can lead to blindness, according to researchers from Harvard. Bonus: Vitamin A also helps form and maintain healthy skin,teeth and bones.
3. Lower Blood Pressure Pumpkin seed oil is full of phytoestrogens, which research shows are beneficial for preventing hypertension. When researchers fed rats a diet supplement with the oil, they found that it helped lower both systolic and diastolic blood pressure in just 12 weeks.
4. Sleep Better Pumpkin seeds are rich in tryptophan, the amino acid that contributes to post-Thanksgiving dinner sleepiness, says Virgin. Tryptophan is also responsible for helping the body make serotonin, the feel-good neurotransmitter that helps you relax and unwind. Not only do pumpkin seeds promote better sleep, the serotonin will improve your mood, says Virgin.
5. Protect Your Package Pumpkins — especially the seeds — are rich in beta-carotene and other antioxidants with cancer protective properties, says Virgin. And pumpkin seeds could be especially healthy for men. Researchers in Taiwan found pumpkin seed oil blocked unhealthy prostate growth in male rats. A quarter cup of the seeds also contains about 2.75 mg of zinc (about 17 percent of the recommended daily intake for adults), which contributes to male sexual health. 
6. Have a Healthier Heart All that fiber can also help protect your ticker, research shows. One Harvard study of over 40,000 male health professionals found that those who ate a diet high in fiber had a 40 percent lower risk of coronary heart disease, compared to those who ate a diet low in fiber. A more recent study by Swedish researchers found that women who ate a diet high in fiber had a 25 percent lower risk of heart disease compared with women who ate a low fiber diet. 
That means pumpkin-laced desserts won’t quite cut it. For a healthier way to add pumpkin into your diet, adding pumpkin chunks to a roasted vegetable medley, or sprinkling pumpkin seeds on top of your salad. Feeling even more creative? Try pumpkin puree in place of nut butters as a spread and for an energizing morning smoothie, blend a high-quality protein powder with coconut milk, chia seeds, pureed pumpkin and pumpkin pie spice. 

Monday, December 8, 2014

Regular eye exams can detect Glaucoma, experts say


TORONTO -- It turns out those ubiquitous tinted glasses worn by Bono aren't just glam rock-star posturing, but a way of dealing with light sensitivity resulting from glaucoma -- a condition the U2 frontman was diagnosed with 20 years ago.

So just what is glaucoma and who is at risk for this potentially vision-stealing eye disease?

Glaucoma usually -- but not always -- results from a buildup of pressure within the eye, which occurs when the aqueous fluid cannot drain properly. Left untreated, the condition can lead to damage of the optic nerve, which transmits visual information from the retina to the sight centres of the brain.

Destruction of the optic nerve can mean vision loss, which typically begins subtly, creeping in around the edges of one's sight, says Keith Gordon, vice-president of research at CNIB, formerly known as the Canadian National Institute for the Blind.

"The vision loss usually occurs in the periphery, so it doesn't affect your vision for some time, until it starts closing in on your central vision, because you sort of adjust to bits and pieces of vision loss coming in from the side," says Gordon. "And then all of a sudden, one day you don't notice a car coming in from the periphery and you have a car accident and you realize that's what's happened."

Many people with glaucoma have no idea they have the disease because it usually causes no symptoms, and the slow erosion of sight can go on for years without notice, he says.
"It's a silent thief of sight."

Sheldon Francis had no idea he had glaucoma until he consulted an optometrist about a problem with his peripheral vision. "I was looking in the mirror one day when I was 23 and I noticed that my vision in the right eye was a little hazy, a little blurry."

He was referred to an ophthalmologist, who performed surgery on the eye and prescribed pressure-reducing eye drops.

"I was fine and I could still see perfectly fine out of my left eye, I still had 20/20 vision," says Francis, who lives in Toronto. But the doctor told him the glaucoma would likely occur in his left eye as well.

"He said later on I was probably going to go blind. He said he had not seen glaucoma progress so quickly in somebody that age."

Over time, that prediction came true. Today, at age 38, Francis is blind in his left eye and has only 10 per cent vision in his right. Two more surgeries last year were unable to overcome the severe damage to his optic nerves.

What Francis didn't realize is that he likely was born with the condition, or at least with a strong genetic predisposition for developing it: his mother and father, both of African descent, developed glaucoma at different stages in life. His dad had it early and ended up losing sight in one eye, but can see "perfectly" with the other; his mom was diagnosed later in life and with treatment has been able to maintain her vision.

"Because both of my parents have it, I got sort of the double-whammy," says Francis. "I had this disease in me since I was a kid and my parents just didn't realize that they needed to bring me to the optometrist to check for glaucoma.

"I tried everything in the early stages to prevent me from losing my eyesight so quickly, but it's just genetics."

Ethnicity seems to play a role in prevalence: blacks have a higher risk of developing one kind of glaucoma than do whites, while those of Asian descent and the Inuit are more prone to a second type. Some medical conditions, including diabetes, also raise the risk of developing the condition.

But most cases of glaucoma are age-related, with those over 60 having an increasingly elevated risk of developing the sight-diminishing disease as they add on the decades.
It's also fairly common -- an estimated 270,000 to 400,000 Canadians have the condition, the leading cause of vision loss among seniors after age-related macular degeneration.

Worldwide, glaucoma is the leading cause of irreversible blindness, says Dr. Catherine Birt, an ophthalmologist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto who specializes in the disease.

"Glaucoma is not a single disease," explains Birt. "There are all kinds of subtypes -- primary, secondary, open-angle, angle-closure -- and they all have slightly different presentations and risk factors and treatments."

For the most part, glaucoma can be divided into two main types: open-angle and angle-closure, also called closed-angle glaucoma. Both are related to an inability of the fluid inside the eye to properly drain, leading to a rise in intraocular pressure that over time can damage the optic nerve.

With open-angle glaucoma -- a reference to the angle formed by the cornea and iris -- drainage channels are partially blocked. "The aqueous fluid can get into the drain, but it doesn't flow through properly," says Birt, noting that the exact cause of open-angle glaucoma remains unknown.

Angle-closure glaucoma occurs when tissue, perhaps from the iris or from scarring, blocks the drainage angle so the fluid is trapped inside the eye, often causing intraocular pressure to spike abruptly.

"These are the people who come into the emergency department with sudden severe eye pain and loss of vision," she says.

Treatment depends on the type of glaucoma and its acuteness. Doctors often start by prescribing eye drops that help to alleviate pressure inside the eye.

Laser surgery is also used: with open-angle glaucoma, a special laser can "tickle" the angle drain to make it work better, says Birt. "It does work. It's not a cure and the effects can wear off, but it can offer significantly improved pressure control."

A different type of laser is used to treat closed-angle glaucoma. "Someone with an angle-closure attack can have laser and be essentially cured, not all, but most of the time if we get to it," she says. "If we get to it fast enough, we can resolve the entire situation with the laser and consider that the patient does not have glaucoma."

Surgery is considered when drops and laser either don't work or the patient can't tolerate them, she says.

While high-risk -- there can be complications such as bleeding and infection -- the delicate eye surgery can be highly beneficial, lowering the pressure inside the eye and stabilizing the condition for a significant length of time, says Birt, who performs six to eight glaucoma surgeries a week on average.

"With our current abilities, it's not curable, but it can very often be stabilized. So it's a bit like having high blood pressure or high blood sugar. We can treat it, we can maintain it, we can control the situation.

"But we can't make it go away."

That's why, stresses Gordon of the CNIB, early detection is critical.

Anyone over 60 should have their eyes checked by an optometrist or ophthalmologist once a year, and that examination should include tests for glaucoma. Younger people, especially those of African descent or with a family history of glaucoma, should also be tested at least annually, he says.

"The key reason you have an eye exam is that you can get treatment early, and the earlier you get treatment, the better the chance you have of controlling vision loss," says Gordon, who agrees that people often take their vision for granted.

"People confuse good vision with good vision health. Because you can see well doesn't mean that your eye may not be harbouring something, particularly when it comes to glaucoma -- because you could be losing sight and not be aware of it."

For more information, or to book an appointment, please call 604.913.0135 or visit us online at www.hollyburneyeclinic.com.

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Introducing 1-Day Acuvue DEFINE Contact Lenses


We are now offering the brand new 1-Day Acuvue DEFINE Brand Contact Lenses, a whole new way to enhance the natural beauty of your eyes, for a brighter, more memorable you!

Get a Natural Looking Effect

With an iris-inspired design, 1-DAY ACUVUE® DEFINE™ Brand Contact Lenses blends seamlessly to accentuate your eyes’ natural radiance without masking it.





Why Choose 1-Day Acuvue DEFINE?


Comfort 
The innovative moisture cusion provides exceptional comfort from morning until night. This is coupled with the Beauty Wrapped in Comfort Technology, which prevents the pigment from touching the eye or eyelid without impacting lens thickness.

UV Protection
UV-blocking technology helps protect your eyes from the transmission of the sun's harmful rays.

Health 
A fresh new lens every day - the healthiest way to wear contact lenses. Created on the same contact lens platform as 1-Day Acuvue Moist brand contact lenses.

A Brand You Can Trust 
1-Day Acuvue DEFINE is brought to you by the Acuvue Brand - the #1 selling contact lens brand globally.

For more information on these contact lenses please visit the Acuvue website HERE.

For more information or to book an appointment with one of our Doctors of Optometry, please feel free to call us at 604.553.3900 or visit us online at www.visionsourcenw.com.

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Shop the Neighbourhood! 35% OFF

Save the date!

November 29, 2014 is Shop The Neighbourhood.

What is Shop The Neighbourhood?
A free event that supports small businesses by encouraging people to make local purchases on November 28 & 29, 2014. This initiative of Yellow Pages contributes to the prosperity of our neighbourhoods and also offers you a great local shopping alternative at the start of the busy holiday season.

Shop The Neighbourhood encourages Canadians to support the small businesses in their communities by making a local purchase. Small businesses play a key role in creating strong local economies and contribute to making neighbourhoods thriving places to live, play and work. Shop The Neighbourhood is a celebration of their invaluable contribution to our communities and a reminder for all Canadians of how shopping locally makes a difference in all our lives.

Guess what? Vision Source New Westminster is proud to be participating in Shop The Neighbourhood!

How can you help?
To participate as a shopper, we’re asking you to save one planned purchase for November 28-29thand make it local. If we all choose to make our next purchase locally, we’re helping to strengthen our small businesses and by proxy, the neighbourhoods where we live, work and play. You can also join the conversation on Facebook or Twitter and follow #shopthehood.

Get out on November 29th and explore the neighbourhood’s local businesses!

We will be offering 35% OFF Prescription Glasses and Sunglasses . You can check out our deal on the Yellow Pages mobile app and online at YP.ca

The staff at Vision Source New Westminster would like to thank you in advance for your continued support of our business.

For more information about Shop The Neighbourhood and to join the conversation on social media please visit: www.shoptheneighbourhood.ca.

For more information about Vision Source New Westminster, please feel free to call us at 604.553.3900 or visit us online at www.visionsourcenw.com.

Monday, November 17, 2014

Vision Source WINS New Small Business of the Year! 2014 Platinum Awards!

Last week, the New Westminster Chamber of Commerce handed out its annual business and community awards. The Platinum Awards are a celebration of business and community excellence in New Westminster and they recognize businesses and individuals whose achievements and contributions to the community distinguish them from their peers. 

Dr. Pavan Avinashi was honoured to have won the 2014 New Small Business of the Year Award! At Vision Source New Westminster, we are committed to improving and managing the ocular and visual health of our patients. Our attention to customer service is further enhanced by state-of-theart diagnostic equipment. We offer consultations as well as pre and post-operative management services for a variety of medical procedures and we work closely with the finest ophthalmologists to ensure the best quality of overall patient care. Our patients are our top priority. 


From May of 2014 until September 26, 2014, the New Westminster Chamber received nominations from the community. At the time of the nominations deadline we had received a record-breaking number of nominations and the adjudication work began.

Each nomination was presented to the judging team and the panel of 7 judges independently scored the nominations based on the criteria. A second team tabulated the results and last night we were introduced to the winners

"Honouring businesses and individuals for their contributions to the betterment of the community can only be achieved through the support and admiration of their customers, friends and colleagues, which speaks volumes about their characters." says Jean Hincks Chair of the 2014 Platinum Awards and Chair Elect of the New Westminster Chamber. "This group of people have shown resilience in the face of adversity, innovation in their dreams and passion in their professions."

Congratulations to all of this year's winners.

Citizen of the Year-  Amber Anderson
Business Person of the Year- Bart Slotman
Junior Citizen of the Year- Sadie De Coste
Bernie Legge Cultural Award- Trudy Van Dop
Not for Profit of the Year- Under $1 Million-  Fraser River Discover Centre
Not for Profit of the Year - Over $1 Million-  Family Services of Greater Vancouver
Customer Service Business Excellence- Family Eyecare Centre
Customer Service Individual Excellence-  Kasia Cobb, Charlie's Pet Spa
NEW Small Business of the Year- Vision Source New West
NEW Medium Sized Business of the Year-  CG Masters Academy Inc
NEW Large Sized Business of the Year- Hub Restaurant New West
Small Business of the Year- Essence Hair Design
Medium Sized Business of the Year - Royal City Jewellers
Large Business of the Year- Inn at the Quay
Creative Innovator of the Year- The Marketing Team at Douglas College

Inclusion Excellence Award - Dye and Durham Corp.
Green Business of the Year- TIED  two awards - Starlight Casino/ River Market
Corporate Community Spirit- Cartwright Jewelers

Dr. Pavan Avinashi and the Vision Source New Westminster staff would like to thank the Chamber of Commerce for this excellence award and we look forward to continuing to provide superior eyecare. For more information on Vision Source New Westminster, please feel free to call us at 604.553.3900 or visit us online at www.visionsourcenw.com.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Deering bird survives world’s first-ever falcon cataract surgery

With a huff, and a puff, and a cock of her head to the side, Banner the lanner falcon announced yesterday at 4 p.m. that yes, she had made it through her surgery just fine, thank you. Would everyone please stop staring at her now?

Banner, who belongs to Jim and Nancy Cowan at the New Hampshire School of Falconry in Deering, is the first falcon in the world to have cataract surgery. She’s had a cataract in each of her eyes for almost two years, and without her sight, she hasn’t been able to hunt or even fly.


Yesterday, a team of veterinarians and veterinary technicians carefully drugged her, cut into her cornea, removed the cloudy protein and implanted a uniquely designed artificial lens, and sewed her cornea shut again.

“It amazes me how strong she is,” Nancy Cowan said as she watched Banner’s clear dark eyes scan the crowded hallway. “Lanners have a reputation as quiet birds, and I think it works for her, that temperament, that she’s a bit sweeter than other falcons.”

Banner’s ground-breaking surgery was originally scheduled for February, but was postponed several times as the team worked to perfect the shape and size of the artificial lens, and battled health problems of their own. George Messenger of Fisherville Animal Hospital, who supervised the anesthesia, underwent heart surgery this summer, and Ruth Marrion, a Massachusetts-based veterinary ophthalmologist, performed the surgery yesterday seated, because she broke her leg last month.

Seven people hovered over Banner in the operating room yesterday, and dozens more – in Montreal, California, Ohio, Germany and Abu Dhabi – were involved in designing the artificial lenses, which had to match precise measurements.

I-Med, a Canadian ophthalmology supply manufacturer, donated the lenses, which are about 6 millimeters wide. Capital Area Veterinary Emergency Services in Concord donated the operating room and supplies. Messenger and Marrion both donated their time yesterday and at several appointments over the summer preparing for the main event.

A lens has two parts: a thin covering called the capsule, which is like a baggie, and the contents, which are normally clear like a raw egg white. The dense contents help the eye focus light and draw crisp images to the optic nerve.

A lens with a cataract is like a baggie filled with cooked egg white, letting only limited light through to the nerve.

Marrion cut a tiny hole through the baggie and vacuumed out the opaque contents. Then, she folded the flexible artificial lens, slipped it through the small hole and placed it in the baggie, which should hold it in place as if it were spring-loaded.

The hourlong surgery went smoothly and the vets and technicians chatted as each step went exactly according to plan.

But Messenger wasn’t ready to celebrate until after the very last step – extubating, or removing the breathing tube in Banner’s throat that allowed them to pump anesthesia to her. The process is crucially important and incredibly delicate, he said.

“It’s called last stitch syndrome: You’re suturing someone up and on that last stitch, it could all go wrong,” he said.

He had to suck on the tube as he withdrew it to ensure mucus that had built up inside it wouldn’t fall into her throat and block her airway. Then, veterinary technician Shaela Messenger wrapped the bird in a pink towel and carried her out into the hallway. The Cowans and all of the veterinary staff smiled and chatted.

But a few minutes later, Shaela calmly whispered to George Messenger that the bird wasn’t waking up, and the two walked silently and purposefully to the incubator. In the dark heated cage, Banner could stay warm without being held, and might be more likely to wake up, they said.

Cowan pulled on her falconer’s glove and shifted her weight impatiently from one foot to the other. Banner, still wrapped in the towel, opened her feathered eyelids halfway and waggled her head side to side. Then, she stood, wobbling a little, puffed out her chest and stretched her wings, filling the cage.

Within minutes, Cowan reached into the incubator and loaded Banner onto the glove.

They’ll have to give her anti-inflammatory eye drops for a few weeks and make sure her eyelids don’t become too irritated by the sutures in her corneas. The Cowans both cried with relief at the first sign Banner had survived the surgery.

“When we first started looking for help, we heard a lot of anecdotal, ‘well, it can’t be done,’ ” Jim Cowan said.

As Nancy held the bird on her glove, he shook a leather tassel a few feet away, and smiled gleefully when Banner turned toward it.

“You can see something all right,” he said. “You can see something.”