ON
← Zurück zum Feed
A device that revives eyeballs from dead donors could make eye transplants possible
United States🔬 Wissenschaftgestern

A device that revives eyeballs from dead donors could make eye transplants possible

Researchers led by Pia Cosma at the Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology have developed a device called the Eye-in-a-Care-Box (ECaBox) that aims to preserve and potentially revive donor eyes. The device uses an oxygen-rich fluid to circulate through the eye's artery, maintaining temperature and pressure while allowing observation of the eye's condition. Testing on pig eyes showed that those kept in the ECaBox remained significantly more viable than untreated eyes, retaining structural integrity and responding to light. Human eyes obtained from deceased donors were also tested, with perfused eyes showing better preservation of retinas compared to non-perfused ones. While whole-eye transplants have been attempted before, such as a 2023 surgery where a man received a transplanted eye along with part of his face, the transplanted eye did not restore vision. The ECaBox could enable further research into eye treatments and potentially improve outcomes for future whole-eye transplants.

Wie jede Seite berichtete

Dasselbe Ereignis, gruppiert nach der politischen Ausrichtung der berichtenden Medien.

Wie jede Seite berichtete

Unterstütze unabhängige, biasbewusste Nachrichten und schalte den Social-Puls, das Community-Voting und deinen persönlichen Für-dich-Feed frei.

Unterstützer werden

Weltweite Berichterstattung

Dasselbe Ereignis, wie es in anderen Ländern berichtet wurde.

Weltweite Berichterstattung

Unterstütze unabhängige, biasbewusste Nachrichten und schalte den Social-Puls, das Community-Voting und deinen persönlichen Für-dich-Feed frei.

Unterstützer werden

Faktencheck

Zentrale faktische Aussagen und wie viele Quellen sie bestätigen bzw. bestreiten.

Faktencheck

Unterstütze unabhängige, biasbewusste Nachrichten und schalte den Social-Puls, das Community-Voting und deinen persönlichen Für-dich-Feed frei.

Unterstützer werden

Zu den Primärquellen (2)

Die offiziellen Quellen, auf denen die Berichterstattung beruht. Lies sie direkt, um Framing zu umgehen.

1 Berichte

MIT Technology Review logoMIT Technology ReviewUnabhängigMitteFaktentreue 85Objektivität 70gestern
A device that revives eyeballs from dead donors could make eye transplants possible

Researchers led by Pia Cosma at the Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology have developed a device called the Eye-in-a-Care-Box (ECaBox) that aims to preserve and potentially revive donor eyes. The device uses an oxygen-rich fluid to circulate through the eye's artery, maintaining temperature and pressure while allowing observation of the eye's condition. Testing on pig eyes showed that those kept in the ECaBox remained significantly more viable than untreated eyes, retaining structural integrity and responding to light. Human eyes obtained from deceased donors were also tested, with perfused eyes showing better preservation of retinas compared to non-perfused ones. While whole-eye transplants have been attempted before, such as a 2023 surgery where a man received a transplanted eye along with part of his face, the transplanted eye did not restore vision. The ECaBox could enable further research into eye treatments and potentially improve outcomes for future whole-eye transplants.

Tendenz-Einschätzung (Mitte): The article discusses scientific advancements in preserving donor eyes using a novel device. It presents findings from experiments on both pig and human eyes without taking a stance on the implications or politicizing the research. There is no indication of ideological framing or bias in the content

Warum diese Bewertungen (Faktentreue 85 · Objektivität 70): Factually covers the ECaBox technology and its implications for eye preservation, aligning with the broader context of eye transplants. However, it doesn't mention the actual transplant case or Aaron James directly, focusing instead on a different development. Objectivity is lower due to promotional

Halte die Nachrichten ehrlich.

ObjectiveNews ist leserfinanziert und werbefrei – wir zeigen dir den Bias, statt ihn zu verstecken. Unterstütze unabhängigen Journalismus für 5 €/Monat.

Unterstützer werden

Ähnliche Themen