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Neuro-Ophthalmology Faculty and Staff

FACULTY RESEARCH INTEREST SUMMARIES >>>

Matthew Thurtell

Service Director, Dr. Matthew Thurtell, MBBS, MSc joined our Department in December 2010, as Assistant Professor with a joint appointment in Ophthalmology, Neurology, and the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Dr. Thurtell trained in Neurology in Sydney, Australia under the mentorship of Dr. G. Michael Halmagyi, one of the most well-known experts in ocular motility and the vestibular system. Following his residency, Dr. Thurtell completed a two-year fellowship in Neuro-ophthalmology with Drs. John Leigh and Robert Tomsak at Case Western Reserve in Cleveland, Ohio. During his clinical fellowship in Cleveland, Dr. Thurtell continued to develop his expertise in eye movement and in the visual afferent system, with special interest in the pathophysiology and treatment of raised intracranial pressure as it pertains to the visual system. Dr. Thurtell then completed a third year of Neuro-ophthalmology fellowship at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia under the direction and mentorship of Drs. Nancy Newman, Valerie Biousse, and Beau Bruce. Dr. Thurtell adds important expertise to our Iowa Neuro-ophthalmology Service in central and peripheral aspects of ocular motility physiology and pathology. He also continues his interest and expertise in the afferent visual system, including idiopathic intracranial hypertension.


 

Sophia Chung, MDSophia M. Chung, MD joined our Department in January 2020 after 6 months sabbatical as the Helen C Levitt Endowed Annual Visiting Professor.  Previously, she held the Walter and Sharon Ryan Davisson Endowed Professorship of Ophthalmology at Saint Louis University School of Medicine in Saint Louis, MO, where she served for 30 years.  She holds a second appointment in the Department of Neurology.  She completed her residency in ophthalmology and fellowship in neuro-ophthalmology at the Cullen Eye Institute, Baylor College of Medicine.  Dr. Chung is an Emeritus Board Director of the American Board of Ophthalmology, current Vice-Chair for the ACGME RRC for Ophthalmology, and Fellow of the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society having served on its’ board and numerous committees.  Dr. Chung considers her greatest contribution to the field of ophthalmology to be the education of residents, medical students, and fellows.  She has won 5 teaching and 3 best lecturer awards and was amongst the inaugural group of awardees of the Distinguished Teacher Award at Saint Louis University School of Medicine.  She will continue her teaching endeavors and continue her research on optic nerve blood flow using laser speckle flowgraphy. 


Randy Kardon

Randy Kardon MD, PhD, has been part of the neuro-ophthalmology faculty in this Department since 1989. He has continued the Iowa tradition of interest in pupillary questions and has taken pupillary research to a new level of technical sophistication. He is recognized as an important innovator; he has developed several new tests for examining visual function, and has a number of nationally competitive grants supporting his pupil studies. In addition, he is known as an astute diagnostician, an effective teacher, and is a much sought after lecturer.

 

 

 


Edward F. Linton, MD, portraitEdward F. Linton, MD joined our department in July 2023 as assistant professor following a clinical neuro-ophthalmology fellowship, and an additional year of research fellowship both at the University of Iowa. Dr. Linton completed his undergraduate and medical school at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. He then did his residency training in Ophthalmology at Vanderbilt in Nashville TN. His primary research interests are in structural and functional assessment of the visual system including new approaches to perimetry to improve reliability and access, integration of different imaging modalities including blood flow and OCT imaging, and deep learning approaches to image analysis.His primary research interests are in structural and functional assessment of the visual system including new approaches to perimetry to improve reliability and access, integration of different imaging modalities including blood flow and OCT imaging, and deep learning approaches to image analysis.


Adriana Rogriguez Leon, MD, portraitAdriana Rodriguez Leon, MD is an assistant professor of Neurology and Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences. Dr. Rodriguez Leon completed her medical school at the Universidad Central de Venezuela, in Caracas, Venezuela in 2012, and then completed a rural internship as an emergency and general physician. After moving to the United States in 2014, she did a research fellowship focused in neuropathic eye pain, at Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, at the University of Miami. She then moved to Iowa in 2017, where she completed a four-year residency in Neurology and subsequently a 2-year Neuro-Ophthalmology fellowship at The University of Iowa, which was completed in 2023. Her areas of expertise include treating diseases related to the optic nerve, optic pathways, high order visual function, ocular motility and a number of inflammatory and neurodegenerative diseases with ocular manifestations. She also has interest and expertise in diagnosing and treating headache disorders and facial pain.

Her primary research interests are focused on the study of photophobia in different headache and facial pain disorders, and on idiopathic intracranial hypertension, particularly on pulsatile tinnitus and venous flow, and how to develop objective clinical values to monitor disease progression and treatment response. Dr. Rodriguez Leon is a Board Certified Neurologist by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology (ABPN), member of the American Academy of Neurology (AAN), American Headache Society (AHS) and the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society (NANOS). She also has had collaborations with the Center for the Prevention and Restoration of Visual Loss (CPTVL) at the Iowa City VA Medical Center since 2022.


Michael WallMichael Wall, MD is a neurologist who trained as a neuro-ophthalmologist in Boston. Dr. Wall has been part of the Neuro-ophthalmology faculty at Iowa since 1991. Before that, he had been a neuro-ophthalmologist at Tulane University in New Orleans. Dr. Wall holds a secondary appointment in the Department of Neurology. He has a special clinical interest in increased intracranial pressure and its effect on vision. He was the principal investigator of the NIH funded Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension Treatment Trial. Dr. Wall is also an expert on testing the visual fields and a respected investigator on the subtleties of this important test.

 


Ramona WeberRamona Weber is our service secretary

View group photos of past faculty and fellows