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In your good books
Article in PDF
Euro Times takes a
closer look at new books of ophthalmological interest:
"The
Vitreous Body in 3-D" and "Cisternal Anatomy of
the Vitreous"
by Ana Hidalgo-Simon MD, PHD
The Vitreous body:
3-D ANATOMICAL BEAUTY
If you know somebody who thinks that eyeballs are disgusting, you
should show them The Vitreous Body in 3-D. This little booklet
conjures up images of creatures floating under sea or unknown
planets and moons spinning in outer space.
It is
beautiful. It is also real human vitreous. The fact that structures
with the consistency of cobwebs have been stained and captured in a
photograph with stunning visual effects in three dimensions does not
make them less real. And that is why this work deserves wider
dissemination.
The Vitreous Body in
3-D consists of 18 pairs of images. But when seen through the viewer
inserted in the back cover of the booklet, the images are
transformed into in life sized 3-D images of ocular globes _denuded
of the sclera_ at different stages of dissection and stained with
different dyes.
Each image has a
brief explanatory note of what you see, with a few numbers labeling
particular structures. There are no comments or explanations of the
implications of what you see, just a little assistance to help you
interpret the images.
For information on
dissection techniques and the importance of vitreous anatomy, the
booklet refers you to the companion textbook, The Cisternal Anatomy
of the Vitreous, also by Jan Worst MD, with co-author Leonoor Los.
Although these two
books were published six years apart, the ideas they contain are
basically the same; it makes sense to review them together.
Both reflect the
ideas and lifework of Prof Worst. Born in 1928, this Dutch
ophthalmologist has been an active member of the international
ophthalmic community for nearly half a century.
Although often
controversial, there is no doubt that he is the proud owner of an
extremely fruitful mind and many innovative ideas, many of them
extremely successful. Prof Worst recruited Ms Los into the project
to help write and compose The cisternal Anatomy of the Vitreous.
The book looks like a
solid textbook. But perhaps as the first hint that things may not be
as they appear at first sight, and that you should not take initial
impressions for granted, this book has a trick . It is only half a
book.
After some 140 pages
of regular text, with the occasional line drawing, the book's second
half is like no other ophthalmic textbook. It has a recess cut out
of its middle to carry _ or hide_ things, like the hollowed-out
Bible in Western movies that hides a pistol or flask of whiskey.
It's the type of book
that explains why people without much love of reading spend some
time on their own in the study room.
The secret
compartment contains a viewer. It's a flat -packed plastic device
with two little lenses and a slot for micro-stereo slides. It is
almost like a traditional slide viewer _ easy to use, just by
holding it up at a short distance from your eyes.
The micro-stereo slides consist of 80 pairs of high quality slides;
through the viewer, each pair of images becomes a single, 3-D globe
in full colour.
The book begins with
an illustrated description of how Prof Worst obtained the images.
With line diagrams, the book shows, step-by-step, how Prof Worst
prepared and dissected the specimens. The chapter also describes in
some detail the intravitreal structures.
The second chapter
reviews the literature on the anatomy of the vitreous, structured
according to the different vitreal structures. Line diagrams and
histological illustrations, many borrowed from other sources, help
present a comprehensive overview.
A chapter on the
functional anatomy of the vitreous follows. Prof Worst bases this
chapter on his conviction that an ophthalmologist cannot understand
the physiological functions of the vitreous body without knowledge
of its microscopic structures and biochemical properties. Some
beautiful electron microscope images help make the point.
The book next
explores the so-called "compartmentalisation concept"as it relates
to cataract surgery.
Here we get into
Worst's own concept_introduced in 1975_ as a unifying theory which
proposes that the disruption of the biochemical barrier of anterior
and posterior compartments of the eye can explain the development
macular oedema and retinal detachment following cataract surgery.
You will find here a detailed explanation of the theory, and its
clinical relevance.
The book next
discusses aphakic cystoid macular oedema (CMO). The pathological
effects of inflammatory mediators, the prophylactic effects of
non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs and possible reasons for the
variable interval between cataract surgery and CMO are all here.
Rhegmatogenous
retinal detachment _ including a good discussion of existing
theories_ and diabetic retinopathies are the subjects of the last
two chapters. The book approaches both conditions from a
vitreous-centric point of view
The book finishes
with a figure-by-figure guide to the microstereo slides contained in
the secret pocket, a list of abbreviations and an index. This is a
book full of science, presented in the most professional and
methodical way.
The basic idea of
both books is that the highly complex structures of the vitreous
body are difficult to study and have no easy correlation with
functional aspects of the eye.
The implication of
both works is that a mental switch is necessary in current clinical
ophthalmology: The vitreous is not a fluid medium; it is an organ.
It has its own structures and peculiarities that must have an impact
on its function.
In some ways, these
books are written for the future by somebody who would like to be
proven right now rather than later, but who is not, in fact, in a
hurry.
Whether or not you
agree with Prof Worst's interpretation of the meaning and importance
of the vitreous structures, seeing is a good fist step towards
understanding. See and judge for you self.
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