Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

How Blue Light Accelerates Blindness

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Aug, 2018 01:23 PM
    Are you addicted to your smartphones, laptops and tablets? The blue light emitting from these digital devices can affect your eye's retina and lead to age-related macular degeneration, according to a research led by a professor of Indian-origin.
     
     
    Macular degeneration, an incurable eye disease that results in significant vision loss starting on average in a person in his 50s or 60s, is the death of photoreceptor cells in the retina. Those cells need molecules called retinal to sense light and trigger a cascade of signalling to the brain.
     
     
    The findings showed that blue light exposure causes retinal to trigger reactions that generate poisonous chemical molecules in photoreceptor cells.
     
     
    "We are being exposed to blue light continuously, and the eye's cornea and lens cannot block or reflect it," said Ajith Karunarathne, Assistant Professor, University of Toledo in Ohio, US.
     
     
    "It's no secret that blue light harms our vision by damaging the eye's retina," he added.
     
     
    Since photoreceptors, produced in the eye, are useless without retinal, one needs a continuous supply of retinal molecules to see.
     
     
    "It's toxic. If you shine blue light on retinal, the retinal kills photoreceptor cells as the signalling molecule on the membrane dissolves," explained Kasun Ratnayake, doctoral student researcher at the varsity.
     
     
    "Photoreceptor cells do not regenerate in the eye. When they're dead, they're dead for good."
     
     
    In the study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, when the team introduced blue light to other cell types in the body, such as cancer cells, heart cells and neurons, they died as a result of the combination with retinal. Blue light alone or retinal without blue light had no effect on cells.
     
     
    "The retinal-generated toxicity by blue light is universal. It can kill any cell type," Karunarathne said.
     
     
    To protect your eyes from the blue light, wear sunglasses that can filter both UV and blue light outside and avoid looking at your cell phones or tablets in the dark, he suggested.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    British Columbia Bullish On Indian Tech Firms: Jinny Sims

    British Columbia Bullish On Indian Tech Firms: Jinny Sims
    Meet Jinny Jogindera Sims, who was born in Jalandhar in Punjab and migrated at age nine to England where she got a B.Ed degree at the University of Manchester.

    British Columbia Bullish On Indian Tech Firms: Jinny Sims

    Death Of The Password? New Web Standard Trades Passcodes For Biometrics

    "Over time I saw there was a convenience there and I was able to learn what was happening," she says.

    Death Of The Password? New Web Standard Trades Passcodes For Biometrics

    Facebook Deploys ‘Secret Police’ Led By Indian-American Sonya Ahuja To Catch Leakers

    Facebook Deploys ‘Secret Police’ Led By Indian-American Sonya Ahuja To Catch Leakers
    Mark Zuckerberg hosts weekly meetings where he shares details of unreleased new products and strategies in front of thousands of employees, the report said.

    Facebook Deploys ‘Secret Police’ Led By Indian-American Sonya Ahuja To Catch Leakers

    Twitter Appoints IIT-Bombay Alumnus Parag Agrawal As New CTO

    Twitter Appoints IIT-Bombay Alumnus Parag Agrawal As New CTO
    Twitter has appointed distinguished engineer Parag Agrawal, an alumnus of Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay (IIT-B), as its Chief Technology Officer, according to an update at the microblogging site.

    Twitter Appoints IIT-Bombay Alumnus Parag Agrawal As New CTO

    Facebook, Google Making Profits From ‘Pop-up’ Brothels: Report

    Britain’s National Crime Agency (NCA) has accused Facebook and Google of raking in profits from “pop-up” brothels on their platforms.

    Facebook, Google Making Profits From ‘Pop-up’ Brothels: Report

    Facebook Asks If Men Could Request Sexual Photos From Minors

    Facebook has admitted that a survey asking users whether it should allow an adult man to ask a 14-year-old girl for sexual pictures was a "mistake".

    Facebook Asks If Men Could Request Sexual Photos From Minors