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Wednesday, 9 February, 2000, 18:03 GMT
Cataract pioneer receives knighthood

Sir Harold Ridley Sir Harold Ridley and his wife Elizabeth


A scientist who has been credited with saving the sight of at least 200m people worldwide since pioneering cataract surgery has been knighted by the Queen.

Sir Harold Ridley, 93, developed the sight-saving operation 50 years ago.

He used an artificial lens made of Perspex to replace those in eyes which became clouded by cataracts.

Mandela Nelson Mandela owes his sight to Sir Harold
He faced initial opposition from the rest of the medical profession but Mr Ridley persisted in seeking a manufacturer to market the artificial lenses.

It now takes just 20 minutes to perform a cataract operation, with five million people having their sight restored every year through the technique.

An artificial replacement is implanted into the lens of the eye which has been damaged by the cataract.

Among those whose sight has been saved by Sir Harold's work are the Queen Mother and former South African president Nelson Mandela.


It's a great advance in science - I feel gratified, not clever
Sir Harold Ridley
At his investiture at Buckingham Palace, Sir Harold said the thought of tampering with people's eyes had, at first, frightened the medical profession.

"I think the medical profession were scared stiff that it would cause problems with a very delicate organ, the eye," he said. "I couldn't afford to make a single mistake because the whole world was watching me."

The condition is the most common cause of blindness in people over 50 in the UK.

Cataract facts
A cataract is a clouding of the human lens
Vision becomes blurred or dim because light cannot reach the retina
Most cataracts develop among older people as natural lens proteins degenerate
A cataract operation involves an artificial lens being placed in the eye
Cataracts can become thick enough to completely obscure vision


Sir Harold said he was delighted the operation had eventually been recognised as one which can dramatically improve people's quality of life in old age.

"It's a great advance in science - I feel gratified, not clever," he said.

Sir Harold had his own eyes treated a decade ago.

"I am the only man to have invented his own operation," he said.

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See also:
31 Dec 99 |  Health
Knighthood after 50 years
09 Feb 00 |  Health
Cataract surgery delayed
14 Jan 00 |  Health
India cataract policy 'needs review'

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