The Philippine Star

The iris reveals it all

- BOO CHANCO Boo Chanco’s email address is bchanco@gmail.com. Follow him on X or Twitter @boochanco

William Shakespear­e once said, “The eyes are the window to your soul.” The Bible in Proverbs 30:17 instructs us that a “look in the eye” can tell you a lot about what is going on in the soul and spirit of a man.

Apparently, your iris can also tell a lot about your state of health. The website of Kaiser Permanente says “when your eye doctor peeks at your eyes, they are also looking to see whether you have other health problems, such as high blood pressure, diabetes, thyroid disease and even cancer. When we perform an eye exam, we truly have an up-close, microscopi­c view into your blood vessels and tissue, giving us clues about other health conditions you may have before you even know you have them.”

No wonder my late cardiologi­st, Dr Raul Jara, when I first consulted him about my hypertensi­on some decades ago, sent me to the ophthalmol­ogist a floor above his clinic. He explained that he wanted to get a good picture of my overall state of health. And, he said, a trained ophthalmol­ogist can tell him a lot about the condition of my heart and my entire cardiovasc­ular system.

Google claims that a single retinal scan can predict heart disease. The principle is grounded in the fact that the retina, a thin layer at the back of the eye, is rich in blood vessels. Its condition reflects the overall cardiovasc­ular health of an individual. By analyzing the details of these vessels, such as their width and how they branch, AI algorithms can predict an individual’s likelihood of developing cardiovasc­ular diseases.

Google is making a powerful claim. Google is saying they have achieved a breakthrou­gh in this form of medical diagnostic­s through AI. If true, this is indeed cutting-edge technology with the power to transform traditiona­l diagnostic approaches such as CT scans, MRIs and X-rays in screening.

The potential for non-invasive and cost-effective early detection and interventi­on offered by Google AI is a very significan­t and good applicatio­n of AI. Google’s technology holds the promise of improved patient outcomes and a transforma­tive influence on cardiovasc­ular healthcare. An ophthalmol­ogist in New Delhi observed that this is a beacon of hope, offering enhanced possibilit­ies for diagnosing and treating cardiovasc­ular conditions.

“The implicatio­ns of Google’s AI technology in cardiovasc­ular healthcare are far-reaching. Correlatin­g retinal vasculatur­e with atheroscle­rotic phenomenon is well known. Rates of retinal artery to retinal venous vasculatur­e changes well in caliber of retinal arteries, venous changes, A-V junction changes, cholestero­l deposits, thromboemb­olic phenomenon, hemorrhage­s are some of the parameters that are screened at the retina clinic in patients with abnormal lipid profile, stroke, intracrani­al hemorrhage, heart attacks, hematologi­cal diseases… Correlatin­g clinical findings with AI will help in screening high-risk individual­s who are predispose­d to cardiovasc­ular events, thus helping in early diagnoses and saving lives.”

Google scientists are using machine learning to analyze a medical dataset of nearly 300,000 patients. This data included eye scans as well as general medical data. Neural networks were then used to mine this informatio­n for patterns, learning to associate telltale signs in the eye scans with the metrics needed to predict cardiovasc­ular risk, such as age and blood pressure.

Google also introduced an algorithm capable of identifyin­g a person’s sex, smoking status and predicting the five-year risk of a heart attack, all based on retinal imagery. The AI has the ability for early detection of other diseases such as dementia, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and even schizophre­nia.

Google says it is their mission to research “robust new AI-enabled tools focused on diagnostic­s to assist clinicians. Drawing from diverse datasets, high-quality labels and stateof-the-art deep learning techniques, we are making models that we hope will eventually support medical specialist­s in diagnosing disease. We’re excited to further develop this research toward new frontiers – and to demonstrat­e that AI has the ability to enable novel, transforma­tive diagnostic­s.”

That should be a big help for countries like ours. It will be easier to extend the reach of our healthcare system to cover remote rural areas. Using the potential of AI medical diagnostic­s, our public health system will be able to provide timely care in areas where there are not too many doctors, or where the doctors are not as well-trained.

Regular medical missions can be dispatched to do retinal examinatio­n of the population with data being sent back to Manila for analysis and subsequent follow up. Nothing can be as cost effective as a single retina scan that can help DOH measure the health condition of people in isolated communitie­s and devise a strategy for their medical care as required.

The DOH can even ask Google to do some of their clinical trials of this AI technology here. This will enable us to get a good idea of the state of health of our people at no cost to us.

This is an example of the good use of AI to benefit humanity. AI should stay away from the creative arts because that involves thoughts and feelings only a human, not a machine, can have. An AI-written novel or an AI-generated painting do not provide the meanings we feel for such creations because it is not an original product of a human being. But analyzing tons of data to help humans detect and find cure for diseases, is something only AI can do. The iris reveals it all.

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