Harold Ridley (ophthalmologist)
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Sir (Nicholas) Harold (Lloyd) Ridley (10 July 1906, Kibworth Harcourt, Leicestershire – 25 May 2001, Salisbury, Wiltshire) was an English ophthalmologist who pioneered artificial intraocular lens transplant surgery for cataract patients.
He was educated at Charterhouse School, Pembroke College, Cambridge and St Thomas' Hospital, and worked as a surgeon at Moorfields Eye Hospital and St Thomas' Hospital in London, specialising in ophthalmology.
Whilst working with Royal Air Force casualties during World War II, Ridley noticed that when splinters of perspex from aircraft cockpit canopies became lodged in the eyes of wounded pilots, they did not trigger rejection, leading him to propose the use of artificial lenses in the eye to correct cases of cataracts.
He had a lens manufactured using an identical plastic - Perspex CQ made by ICI - and on 29 November 1949 at St Thomas' Hospital, Harold Ridley achieved the first implant of an intraocular lens, although it was not until 1950 that he left an artificial lens permanently in place in an eye. The first lens was manufactured by the Rayner company of Brighton, East Sussex, a company which continues to manufacture and market modern, small-incision versions of these lenses today.
Ridley went on to develop comprehensive programmes for cataract surgery with intraocular implants and pioneered this treatment in the face of prolonged strong opposition from the medical community. He worked hard to overcome complications, and had refined the technique by the late 1960s. With his pupil Peter Choyce he eventually achieved worldwide support for the technique, and the intraocular lens was finally approved as "safe and effective" and approved for use in the USA by the Food and Drug Administration in 1981. These first FDA approved lenses, (Choyce Mark VIII and Choyce Mark IX Anterior Chamber lenses were manufactured by Rayner. Cataract extraction surgery with intracocular lens implantation is now the commonest type of eye surgery.
Harold Ridley also led important research into onchocerciasis when he was stationed in Ghana during World War II.
He was a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons and a Fellow of the Royal Society. In 2000 he received a knighthood for his services to medicine.
[edit] External links
- haroldridley.com site about the biography by David J. Apple, M.D.
- "A visionary recognised" profile marking the centenary of his birth in The Times September 22, 2006
- "Sir Harold Ridley" in Cataract & Refractive Surgery Today March 2004
- "A pioneer in the quest to eradicate world blindness" in the Bulletin of the World Health Organization 2003
- "He changed the world - So that we might better see it" in the Arquivos Brasileiros de Oftalmologia February 2002
- "Valediction: Sir Harold Ridley's vision" in the British Journal of Ophthalmology September 2001
- The Birth of the IOL part of the history of Rayner, manufacturer of the first IOL
- "Harold Ridley and the Invention of the IOL" in Survey of Ophthalmology January 1996

