Eye Banking: An Overview
Downloads
Published
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.56692/upjo.2024120205Keywords:
Eye bank, Cornea blindness.Dimensions Badge
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
© Author, Open Access. This article is licensed under a CC Attribution 4.0 License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/byncsa/4.0/.
(harvesting) and processing donor corneas and for distributing them to trained corneal graft surgeons.3 It should be registered with the competent authority in the state under the Transplantation of Human Organs Act 1994. With the availability of MK medium and Optisol, eye banks should ideally switch over from enucleation to in situ corneal excision procedures. This will enable better viability of donated corneas during storage. Structurally, it has administrative and medical components. Functionally, the administrative section is responsible for public awareness programs, liaison with government, local voluntary and other health care agencies and fundraising. The medical section deals with the entire technical operation of the eye bank. Basically, the eye banking system has a three-tier approach. The different constituents are eye donation centers, eye banks and eye banking training centers. All of them have to be integrated. Networking of eye banks under the umbrella of a national organization allows better attempts at public education programs, an institution of newer eye banking procedures, and training programs. India needs 50 eye banks, five of which will also be eye banking training centers, 2000 eye donation centers, Cornea Retrieval Programmes in 500 hospitals and 1000 corneal specialists to make a real impact on the problem of this reversible form of corneal blindness. Let all of us involved in the fight against corneal blindness work together for a national goal.Abstract
How to Cite
Downloads
Similar Articles
- Sameeksha Agrawal, Ankit Agrawal, Krishna K Agrawal, Vijay K. Agrawal, Dengue Fever Associated Foveolitis , UP Journal of Ophthalmology: Vol. 11 No. 01 (2023): UP JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
- Sanjiv Kumar Gupta, Mohd Shadab, Deepika Verma, Priya Sharma, Siddharth Agrawal, Case Series of Ocular Injury with Firecracker During Diwali in North India , UP Journal of Ophthalmology: Vol. 10 No. 01 (2022): UP JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
- Satyajit Sinha, Nimmi Rani, Ajit Poddar, Vishal Kishore, M Akbar, Lav Kochgaway, Himanshu Kumar, Abhishek Ranjan, Ashish Shekhar, K L Agarwal, Ajit Kumar Dwivedi Kumar, Jaishree Shekhar, Premium IOLs Selection Criteria, Investigations IOl Models and Residual Correction : An Overview , UP Journal of Ophthalmology: Vol. 8 No. 03 (2020): UP JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
- Md Mosaib Omaer, Parivish Husain, Seasonal Trends in Patient Visits and Common Ocular Site of Abnormalities: A Study from a Tertiary Eye Hospital in Western Uttar Pradesh, India , UP Journal of Ophthalmology: Vol. 12 No. 03 (2024): UP Journal of Ophthalmology
- Rajendrababu Sharmila, Kannan Shalini, More Shilpa, Mohammed Sithiq Uduman S, Krishnadas SR, A Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial to Compare Conventional Drug Instillation to A Device Dropper method in Medical treatment of Glaucoma , UP Journal of Ophthalmology: Vol. 8 No. 03 (2020): UP JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
- Mansi Pankaj, Abhishek Chandra, Sonali Singh, Govind Khalkho, Neha Shilpy, Management of a Case of Phacoanaphylactic Glaucoma – Case Report , UP Journal of Ophthalmology: Vol. 13 No. 02 (2025): UP Journal of Ophthalmology
- Sundaram Natarajan, Jaydeep Walinjkar, Rohan Jain, Afroz Patel, Ocular Trauma Management: A VR Surgeon’s Perspective , UP Journal of Ophthalmology: Vol. 11 No. 01 (2023): UP JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
- Raina Garg, Tejal Srivastava, Mohammad Saquib, Surgically Induced Focal Scleral Necrosis – A Rare Outcome , UP Journal of Ophthalmology: Vol. 13 No. 01 (2025): UP Journal of Ophthalmology
- Kanika Bhardwaj, Tulika Chauhan, Sagarika Patyal, Descemetopexy: A Little More Than Just Providing Support!! A Gist on Descemet Membrane Detachment and Descemetopexy Procedure , UP Journal of Ophthalmology: Vol. 11 No. 02 (2023): UP JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
- O.l. Haque, A. sarii, CHILDHOOD BLINDNESS: CHALLENGES AHEAD , UP Journal of Ophthalmology: Vol. 2 No. 01 (2014): UP JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.