PRESIDENT Barack Obama awarded LASIK eye surgery inventor Gholam Peyman, MD, with the National Medal of Technology and Innovation, the highest honor bestowed on an American innovator, during a ceremony at the White House Friday.
Dr Peyman, a professor of Optical Sciences and Engineering at the University of Arizona College of Medicine–Phoenix and a long-standing member of the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery (ASCRS) is among 12 researchers to receive the honor.
“When Gholam Peyman first accepted a position at the office of the
“I am so honored by this award,” said Dr. Peyman in a prepared statement. “What a wonderful surprise. I am gratified that our work has touched so many people. We work always to enhance treatments and improve the outcomes for patients. We continue to look forward since there are many more problems to solve.”
An ophthalmologist and vitreoretinal surgeon, Dr. Peyman has more than 135 patents. Although he is widely known for inventing the LASIK vision correction procedure, his inventions cover a broad range of novel medical devices, intro-ocular drug delivery systems, surgical techniques, laser and optical instruments, and new methods for diagnosis and treatment.
Dr. Peyman is also credited with developing the first pressure-controlled valve - now known as the Krupin valve for glaucoma surgery - and the first telescopic IOL for patients with macular disease. He was also among the first to implant an artificial silicone retina in patients with retinitis pigmentosa.
A pioneering force in laser and photodynamic therapy and studies on intraocular drug delivery and refractive and vitreoretinal surgery, Dr. Peyman also established the techniques of eye-wall resection and endoresection for intraocular tumors, and was the first to perform a retinochoroidal biopsy and to transplant retinal pigment epithelial cells for age-related macular degeneration.