B.C. engineer develops scanner to diagnose eye diseases early and save vision
VANCOUVER — A British Columbia engineering science professor has developed a high-resolution scanner that he says will revolutionize how eye diseases are diagnosed to prevent vision loss.
Prof. Marinko Sarunic of Simon Fraser University said doctors currently use low-resolution scanners that can assess the cause of patients’ dead retina cells.
“Because the resolution is low, they don’t detect small changes, they detect big changes,” he said. “What we want is to see the changes to the retinal structure before they’re obvious in a person’s vision.”
A scanner built on billiard-sized tables is now used at a few universities in the world for research purposes but it’s too big and complicated for routine diagnosis of diseases such as glaucoma, diabetic retinopathy and wet age-related macular degeneration, Sarunic said.