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Dr.
Charles Kelman is widely acknowledged as the leading innovator
in the field of ophthalmology. His most celebrated achievement
has been the development of the procedure for removing cataracts
known as phacoemulsification, as well as the creation of instruments
for carrying it out. In 1963, Kelman designed the phacoemulsifier,
an instrument that liquefies cataracts within their capsules for
extraction. Once the cataract is liquefied with a vibrating ultrasonic
tip, the resulting fragments are then suctioned out through a
small vibrating needle. This pioneering procedure dramatically
reduced the risk of complications and turned a 10-day hospital
stay into an outpatient procedure.
Kelman
was born in Brooklyn, New York, received a B.S. from Tufts University
in 1950 and completed his medical studies at the University of
Geneva, Switzerland in 1956. The holder of over 100 patents, Kelman
has been the recipient of numerous awards, including the American
Academy of Achievement Award (1970), the Ridley Medal from the
International Congress of Ophthalmology (1990), the "Inventor
of the Year Award" from The New York Patent, Trademark and
Copyright Law Association (1992), and the prestigious National
Medal of Technology (1992). In 1994, at The International Congress
on Cataract and Refractive Surgery in Montreal, Kelman was named
"Ophthalmologist of the Century" for his pioneering
work in phacoemulsification.

Frederick
Banting
Charles Best
Vannevar Bush
James Collip
Harry Wesley
Coover
Wallace
Coulter
Ray Dolby
Edith Flanigen
Robert Gallo
Ivan Getting
John Gibbon
Lloyd Augustus
Hall
Elias Howe
Charles D.
Kelman
Luc Montagnier
Bernard Oliver
Bradford
Parkinson
Norbert
Rillieux
John Roebling
Claude Shannon
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