Ophthalmology
Paris, Ile-de-France, France
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Professor Ramin Tadayoni is head of the ophthalmology department at the Fondation Adolphe de Rothschild Hospital and the Lariboisière and Saint-Louis University Hospitals (AP-HP) as well as former head of the retina department at Cochin Hospital in Paris. He is a professor of ophthalmology at the University of Paris.
An active member in prestigious international retina societies, including a member of the board of directors of Euretina (European society of retina specialists), former president of the French-speaking Club of Retina Specialists (CFSR), and former account manager of the Club Jules Gonin.
In addition to his clinical and academic work, Pr Tadayoni is the author of nearly two hundred medical and scientific articles. as well as many contributions to ophthalmology textbooks.
His main area of interest is in the diagnosis and treatment of retinal diseases, retinovitreal surgery, and retinal imaging. His research focuses on how to achieve the best functional results after medical or surgical eye treatments, as well as understanding retinal alterations and their relationship to vision.
In 2019, its EVIRED project to change the paradigm for the management of diabetic retinopathy thanks to the contribution of new imaging technologies and artificial intelligence algorithms was awarded the university research program (RHU) of the program investments for the future (PIA).
When it was created in 2019, Professor Ramin Tadayoni joined the network of experts for research and innovation at Rothschild Medical Development, which brings together all the innovative initiatives in which the Rothschild Foundation Hospital is involved.
Pr Ramin Tadayoni is also a member of the Reference Center for rare diseases of the vessels of the brain and the eye (CERVCO).
Professor Tadayoni continued his undergraduate medical training at the University of Marseille, his medical degree, and his internship at the University of Paris 5. He completed his studies with a retina clinic at the Lariboisière University Hospital. At the same time, he pursued his doctorate in science at the University of Paris 7 and at the Institut de la Vision in Paris. He then obtained the HDR, habilitation to direct research, the highest university qualification in France. The American Academy of Ophthalmology also presented him with the Achievement Award. Very attached to training and teaching, he has participated in the training of many assistants and researchers and continues to organize numerous university and postgraduate medical training courses.