Michigan Medicine offers groundbreaking surgery to restore eye sensation

Minimally invasive nerve transplant treats complex corneal condition

Author | Shantell M. Kirkendoll

Michigan Medicine surgeons are helping patients who have lost sensation in their cornea regain feeling in their eye through a small-incision, nerve transplant procedure—corneal neurotization surgery.

Corneal neurotization surgery is a novel, minimally-invasive approach that either re-directs the patient’s own sensory nerves in the forehead or uses a nerve graft from elsewhere in the patient’s body, implanting the new nerve endings around the cornea.

The new surgical procedure is available at Michigan Medicine through collaboration by teams in ophthalmology and visual Sciencesplastic surgery and otolaryngology.

Following the procedure, as the new nerve endings grow into the corneas, “The sensation in the eye has been shown to return over several months,” says Shannon Joseph, M.D., an oculoplastic surgeon at the University of Michigan Kellogg Eye Center.

Michigan is one of the few health systems in the U.S. to offer the procedure which is described as “a new approach to a difficult problem,” by surgeons at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto where the technique was developed.

Patients who have lost sensation in the eye due to infection, diabetes, trauma, malignancies or surgery can develop a condition called neurotrophic keratopathy.

This reduces their ability to feel eye pain or irritation so that they are unable to protect their eyes from everyday elements — such as dust, microscopic debris, and the wind. These daily hazards can cause corneal scratches, infections and scars that can eventually lead to blindness.

Neurotrophic keratopathy can be very difficult to manage. Doctors may try lubricating eye drops, specialized contact lenses or patches, suturing the eyelids shut or closing the tear drains.

The corneal neurotization procedure now provides a powerful opportunity to address the underlying cause of the condition.

Joseph first performed corneal neurotization at Johns Hopkins Medicine. She is now an assistant professor in the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Science at Michigan Medicine, the University of Michigan’s academic medical center.

A coordinated effort by Joseph, Christopher Hood, M.D., and Shahzad Mian, M.D., at the Kellogg Eye Center; David Lawrence Brown, M.D., and Steve Kasten, M.D., in the U-M Department of Surgery; and Jennifer Kim, M.D., in the U-M Department of Otolaryngology, led to applying nerve regeneration principles to the eye condition.

Surgeons take nerves that have less important roles in other parts of the body or are redundant and transfer them to restore sensory function where needed—in this case, a damaged cornea. “About one millimeter of the nerve is restored per day,” Brown explains.

After corneal sensation is restored, corneal transplantation is also more likely to be successful, offering visually impaired patients an opportunity to regain their sight.

Media Contact Public Relations

Department of Communication at Michigan Medicine

[email protected]

734-764-2220

Featured News & Stories kidneys blue yellow
Health Lab
Why personalized medicine is important in rare kidney disease
Building a comprehensive human kidney cell and tissue catalog could help develop more treatments for kidney disease.
10 year old boy leaning against tree and posing with his mom and sisters outside
Health Lab
Family travels over 1,000 miles for son’s heart transplant
Family travels over 1,000 miles for son's heart transplant and ongoing heart care
Scientific illustration of gliobastoma cells in the brain
Health Lab
Path forward for glioblastoma treatment
Experts in brain cancer outline current discoveries and offer a path of hope for glioblastoma treatment
Health Lab Podcast in brackets with a background with a dark blue translucent layers over cells
Health Lab Podcast
Period Poverty and the Need to Make Menstruation Products Easier to Access
A survey focused on how much people in their teens and early 20s know about periods and their experience and attitudes around “period poverty”.
Health care provider with stethoscope holds patient's hand
Health Lab
Opinion: Hospice care for those with dementia falls far short of meeting people’s needs at the end of life
An end-of-life care specialist discusses the shortfalls of hospice care coverage for people with dementia, using the experience of former President Jimmy Carter and former First Lady Rosalynn Carter as examples.
Xray of a stem cell in a mouse brain.
Health Lab
Stem cells improve memory, reduce inflammation in Alzheimer’s mouse brains
Researchers improved memory and reduced neuroinflammation in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s Disease, suggesting another avenue for potential treatment.