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| June
26, 2000 |
Tracking
loss of vision
That's what artist Lee Allen did for new book
| By
Ross M. Hagen |
| Free-lance
writer |
| June
26, 2000 |
What Lee Allen began 12 years ago as a paper for a scholarly medical
journal blossomed into a unique illustrated book on age-related macular
degeneration.
The book, "The
Hole in My Vision: An Artist's View of His Own Macular Degeneration,"
gives readers insight into what someone with macular degeneration actually
sees something even modern technology cannot provide, says Allen.
Allen, who worked
with Iowa artist Grant Wood in the 1930s, joined the University of Iowa
Department of Ophthalmology as an ophthalmic illustrator in 1937. For
the next 39 years until he retired in 1978, Allen combined his artistic
talent with his ever-increasing knowledge of the human eye and photographic
skills to provide the UI ophthalmology faculty and staff with priceless
impressions.
In
a highly unusual step that reflected his value and dedication to the
department, the university gave Allen emeritus status upon his retirement.
Emeritus is commonly granted to faculty, but rarely to staff.
Allen's book
odyssey began in 1988, when he began to see spots that he recognized
as the onset of macular degeneration, a leading cause of blindness in
the United States.
"I got in touch
with the department, but they were unable to detect anything they couldn't
see what I saw," Allen says. "I continued to make notes of the changes
in my sight and drew pictures of what I was seeing."
Six years later,
ophthalmologists were finally able to confirm the diagnosis. Meanwhile,
Allen continued to work on what he thought would become a scholarly
paper for an ophthalmology publication.
"As time went
on, I could see that I had too much information for a journal and began
to think in terms of a monograph," Allen says. "I also conferred with
neuro-opthalmologist H. Stanley Thompson, MD, because I knew he knew
what those internal pictures, known as entoptic, meant."
Allen described
Thompson as a computer whiz, who was able to transcribe Allen's illustrations
and text on a disk. "Eventually, the disk contained what turned out
to be the book."
Later, Allen
says he also got encouragement and support from his laser surgeon, Dr.
James C. Folk, and Dr. Thomas A. Weingeist, professor and head of the
department of ophthalmology.
Originally designed
primarily for ophthalmologists, especially retina experts, the book
now is regarded as a tool to also inform macular degeneration patients
and their families about the disease.
In the book,
Allen sums up why he documented his own vision loss. "What fascinated
me was that I discovered that by blinking my eye, I could see the outline
of the damage that was being done to my macula. I found that I could,
by sketching it, monitor the activity of the disease process. This in
turn has made it possible for me to alert my doctor to new problems
while there is still a chance that the laser treatments will do some
good. It is my hope that this information will help others to add some
years of good vision to their lives."
Now 89 and no
longer able to drive, Allen struggles to maintain his freedom to live
alone in his eastside Iowa City home. "I get around," he says. "I cook
my own food. I don't expect to get totally handicapped for a number
of years."
He explained
that persons with macular degeneration can be called legally blind and
still be able to see "because you only lose the central part of your
vision. The blind area covers only about one-fourth of your eye you
can still see out of the sides. It's kind of like a donut with the hole
representing the blind spot."
Allen was an
art student at UI when he was offered a job by Grant Wood. He worked
with Wood on several large murals in public buildings in Iowa. He felt
that when he completed his studies with Wood in the 1930s he was an
accomplished artist and draftsman, skills which he applied to medical
illustration. Allen's 120-page book is available in selected outlets
at $50 for paperback and $100 for a limited edition hardback. The text
is printed in large type. It was commissioned by the UI Department of
Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences and the UI Center for Macular Degeneration
in observance of the department's 75th anniversary. Proceeds from the
book, published by Penfield Press, will help support the center.
© 2000 Ross M. Hagen.
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