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Glaucoma Clinical and Research Group
   
Gábor Holló, MD, PhD, DSc
    Associate Professor

Glaucoma is one of the most frequent causes of irreversible visual deterioration and blindness worldwide. This group of clinically heterogeneous diseases is characterized by progressive apoptosis of the retinal ganglion cells, which leads to visual field damage as well as deterioration of several other visual functions. Though the number of retinal ganglion cells cannot be directly measured in patients, certain new and still evolving non-invasive imaging technologies allow measurement of the axon layer of these cells. Our group has been active in the development and clinical application of these techniques for 15 years.

Our research group has been working both on clinical and experimental fields related to glaucoma. Of these the most important topics are early instrumental diagnosis of glaucoma, increase of accuracy of mass glaucoma screening using combined evaluation of imaging and functional tests, detection of fine disease progression with modern imaging techniques, ocular and systemic alterations of perfusion in pseudoxefoliative glaucoma, ocular absorption of topically applied ocular medications with potential neuroprotective properties in the human eye, evaluation of intraocular pressure lowering medications, glaucoma surgery and biochemical modulation of wound healing in glaucoma surgery, as well as objective measurement and improvement of patients’ adherence to long-term intraocular pressure lowering medication. Our international collaboration is wide and involves several experimental and clinical projects.
   
   
        
   
   
KEYWORD(S): glaucoma, imaging, neuroprotection, scanning laser polarimetry, 
   
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  KEYWORD UNIVERSE: CO2-sensitivity, GTPase activating proteins - GAPs, NADPH oxidase - NOX2, NADPH oxidase, Neutrophilic granulocytes, TASK, TRESK, aging, apoptosis, asthma, autonomic neuropathy, autoregulation, avian, bioinformatics, blood-brain barrier, c, calcineurin, calcium, cancer, cell biology, cell fusion, cerebral blood flow, cerebral blood volume, complement, dendritic cells, diabetes, dopamine, duplikation, early restenosis, embryo, embryomanipulation, endoplasmic reticulum, endothelium, enviroment, epidemiology, exercise, gene expression, gene, genetics, hydrogen peroxide, hypothalamus, immunology, in vitro fertilization, inflammation, ischemia-reperfusion, liver, lupus nephritis, lymphoid tissue, medicinal chemistry, metabolic bone disease, mitochondria, molecular biology, neuronal plasticity, neuroprotection, oral biology, oxidative stress, pathology, pathophysiology, peroxidase, phagocytes, pharmacokinetics, physiology, potassium channel, reactive oxygen species, receptors redox homeostasis, regulation, signal transduction, small GTPases, stem cell, stress, stroke, superoxide, tetrasomi, tissue engineering, transplantation,  
  Glaucoma Clinical and Research Group  Molecular and Cellular Neuroendocrine Research Laboratory  Laboratory of Corneal Wound Healing  Cerebrovascular Signaling Research Group  Laboratory of Molecular Genetics  Neuromorphological and Neuroendocrine Research Laboratory  Biochemical Pharmacology Unit  Laboratory of Tumor Biology  Laboratory of Molecular Endocrinology   
     Research Areas     

Behavioural sciences

  

Biochemistry, cell biology, biophysics

  

Dental sciences

  

Experimental and clinical immunology and genetics

  

Experimental and clinical oncology

  

Internal medicine and pediatrics

  

Medicine of sensory organs

  

Miscellaneous

  

Molecular biology, microbiology

  

Morphological sciences (anatomy, pathology, forensic medicine)

  

Neurosciences

  

Pharmaceutical sciences, pharmacology

  

Physiology, pathophysiology

  

Reproductive sciences

  

Sport sciences

  

Surgery (operative sciences)

  
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