Research at the University of Rochester Eye Institute
Refractive Surgery
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Groundbreaking work in refractive surgery and corneal disease are among Rochester’s most productive areas of investigation.
Currently, ophthalmologist Scott MacRae, M.D., is conducting clinical trials on the latest refractive surgery techniques. Patients are treated briefly with a laser beam that sculpts the cornea. The procedures he has helped develop have allowed hundreds of thousands of patients worldwide to literally throw away their glasses or contact lenses.
Customized Ablation - "Super Vision"
Dr. MacRae is looking at a unique form of the surgery known as “customized ablation,” an innovative technique that allows doctors to precisely tailor the surgery to compensate for the smallest imperfections within a person’s eye. Soon, Dr. MacRae plans to launch the largest study ever of customized ablation. Doctors will compare conventional laser vision correction to the customized version.
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Such studies are crucial to making the procedure safer and making sure that people benefit as much as possible.
Dr. MacRae is part of a Rochester team of scientists and physicians who founded the field of customized ablation—also known as “super vision” among many eye experts. He works closely with University of Rochester scientist David Williams, Ph.D., who was the first person to design and build a system to allow doctors to see such extraordinary detail that single retinal cells can be studied. Using the same technology that allows astronomers to remove the twinkle from starlight, Dr. Williams has discovered dozens of previously unknown visual imperfections in the human eye. Dr. MacRae is among a handful of surgeons using that knowledge to correct a patient’s vision in unprecedented detail.
Basic Research - Optical Aberrations
At the basic science level, Drs. MacRae and Williams are collaborating
with Krystel Huxlin,
Ph.D., and Geun-Young
Yoon, Ph.D., to develop a model for refractive surgical experiments
that will tease out the causes of optical aberrations and test
ways of preventing or correcting them. Dr. Yoon also is developing
new technologies, including a miniature, portable wavefront sensing
device—highly specialized imaging equipment.




