“The key to preventing DR-related vision loss is early detection through regular screening,” said Yannis Paulus, lead researcher and Assistant Professor from the University of Michigan.

According to Paulus, also a vitreoretinal surgeon at Kellogg Eye Center, “the key is to bring portable, easy-to-administer, reliable retinal screening to primary care doctors’ offices and health clinics”.

Paulus was part of a Kellogg team that developed a device that turns a smartphone into a functioning retinal camera. The team used the latest generation of the smartphone-based platform called RetinaScope.

“This is the first time that AI used on a smartphone-based platform has been shown to be effective compared with the gold standard of clinical evaluation,” said Paulus.

 

Article by”:  IANS 

https://www.iol.co.za/lifestyle/health/smartphone-ai-may-help-detect-diabetic-retinopathy-22224189