生卒年月 1844/01/01 - 1914/01/01
Robert Moon (1844-1914), an ophthalmologist working in medicine in the United Kingdom and the United States. He is the son of Dr. William Moon (1818-1894), the inventor of the blind embossed letter "moon type". Robert Moon's career choices in ophthalmology were influenced by his youthful experience of helping his father translate and copy reading materials for the visually impaired. From 1866 to 1878, he practiced at the South London Eye Hospital, which was founded in 1857 by Dr. Laurence (1829-1870). Together with Dr. Lawrence, he named a disease characterized by retinitis pigmentosa and a variety of other symptoms. Laurence-Moon Syndrome: Loss of vision leads to blindness, mental retardation, short stature and hypogonadism.
生卒年月 1857/01/01 - 1916/01/01
British ophthalmologist, born in 1857, died in 1916. Robert Walter Doyne was educated at Oxford, Bristol and St. George's Hospital in London and settled in Oxford in 1885. He is a very sensitive and accurate clinical observer, named after his transparent denaturation (Doyne's Cellular Crohn's cho) is just one of several situations he first described. Two years after his death, the establishment of the Doyne Memorial Lecture and Medal is also a concentrated expression of his imprisoned emotions, which remains one of the most precious differences in British ophthalmology. Doyne Honeycomb Veinitis: In some families living in Oxford, England, the drusen present on Bruch's membrane was observed. These dendrites tend to fuse together and eventually fuse, just like a hive; therefore, Doyle's cellular choroiditis gets its name.