Early life and education
Sadun was born in New Orleans, LA in 1950 toCareer
Following his Postdoctoral fellowship, Sadun held an appointment as Instructor in Ophthalmology at Harvard School of Medicine in 1983, and became Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology in the following year. In 1984, he joined theResearch
Sadun has focused his research on diseases of the optic nerve, diseases of mitochondrial impairment, optic nerve regeneration, and neuro-protection. He has also worked and published on optic neuropathies, orbital disease, and the basic science underlying problems in neuro-ophthalmology. He has received about 20 national and international awards for his contributions to science and medicine.Vision neuroscience/neuro ophthalmology
Sadun maintains an active laboratory at the Doheny Vision Research Center. In the 1980s, Sadun was among the pioneers to apply a new tract-tracing technique to establish nine anatomical pathways between the eye and various parts of the brain. He was the first to describe a human retinal projection to the hypothalamus that subserves the visual entrainment of the circadian rhythm. In 1993, he was selected and sponsored by the United Nations to lead an investigative team to determine the cause of an epidemic of optic neuropathy in Cuba. This work led to further investigations into the role of mitochondria in optic neuropathies due to injury from nutritional, toxic and genetic causes.Alzheimer's disease
Sadun was the first to identify an optic neuropathy associated with Alzheimer's disease, and to highlight evidence of degeneration in the optic nerves and retinas of Alzheimer Disease (AD) patients. He based his study on light-microscopic and ultrastructural characteristics of ganglion cell degeneration in the retinas of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), and found out that degeneration in the retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) is characterized by a vacuolated, ‘frothy’ appearance of the cytoplasm. In morphometric analysis of the retinas of Alzheimer's disease patients, he demonstrated that the optic nerve initially showed predominant loss of the largest class of retinal ganglion cells (M-cells) that contribute large caliber fibers to the optic nerve.Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON)
Sadun has conducted several projects regardingMajor awards and honors
*1993 - Honor Award, American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO) *1999 - Pizart Award for Vision Research, Lighthouse International *2001 - B. Straatsma Award, AAO and AUPO for Residency Education *2002 - Secretariat Honor Award, AAO *2004 - Senior Honor Award, AAO *2009 - Fellow (Silver Medal), Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO) *2012 - W. Hoyt Award for Neuro-ophthalmology, AAO and NANOS *2014 - Heed Award for Excellence in Academic Ophthalmology, AAO *2016 - Purpura Award as Lifetime Achievement in Medical Science, Albert Einstein College of Medicine *2017 - Life Achievement Award, AAO *2020 - Secretariat Honor Award, AAO *2020 - Gold Medal Fellow, ARVOBibliography
Books
*''Optics for Ophthalmologists: A Board-Review Manual'' (1987) ISBN 9781461248101 *''Neuroprotection: Implication for the Eye Disease'' (2002) *''New Methods of Sensory Visual Testing'' (2012) ISBN 9781461388357 *''Ophthalmology, 5th Edition'' (2018) ISBN 9780323528191 *''Atlas of Leber’s Hereditary Optic Neuropathy'' (2019)Selected articles
*Sadun, A. A., Schaechter, J. D., & Smith, L. E. (1984). A retinohypothalamic pathway in man: light mediation of circadian rhythms. Brain research, 302(2), 371–377. *Hinton, D. R., Sadun, A. A., Blanks, J. C., & Miller, C. A. (1986). Optic-nerve degeneration in Alzheimer's disease. New England Journal of Medicine, 315(8), 485–487. *Sadun, A. A., & Bassi, C. J. (1990). Optic nerve damage in Alzheimer's disease. Ophthalmology, 97(1), 9–17. *Grunberg, S. M., Weiss, M. H., Spitz, I. M., Ahmadi, J., Sadun, A., Russell, C. A., ... & Stevenson, L. L. (1991). Treatment of unresectable meningiomas with the antiprogesterone agent mifepristone. Journal of neurosurgery, 74(6), 861–866. *Sadun, A. A., Martone, J. F., Muci-Mendoza, R., Reyes, L., DuBois, L., Silva, J. C., ... & Caballero, B. (1994). Epidemic optic neuropathy in Cuba: eye findings. Archives of Ophthalmology, 112(5), 691–699. *Smith, R. E., & Sadun, A. A. (1998). Clearing the cornea with nerve growth factor. New England Journal of Medicine, 338(17), 1222–1223. *Sadun, A. A., Win, P. H., Ross-Cisneros, F. N., Walker, S. O., & Carelli, V. (2000). Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy differentially affects smaller axons in the optic nerve. Transactions of the American Ophthalmological Society, 98, 223. *Sadun, A. A., Carelli, V., Salomao, S. R., Berezovsky, A., Quiros, P. A., Sadun, F., ... & Belfort, R. (2003). Extensive investigation of a large Brazilian pedigree of 11778/haplogroup J Leber hereditary optic neuropathy. American journal of ophthalmology, 136(2), 231–238. *Carelli, V., Ross-Cisneros, F. N., & Sadun, A. A. (2004). Mitochondrial dysfunction as a cause of optic neuropathies. Progress in retinal and eye research, 23(1), 53–89. *Pan, B. X., Ross-Cisneros, F. N., Carelli, V., Rue, K. S., Salomao, S. R., Moraes-Filho, M. N., ... & Sadun, A. A. (2012). Mathematically modeling the involvement of axons in Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy. Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, 53(12), 7608–7617. *Lin, C. S., Sharpley, M. S., Fan, W., Waymire, K. G., Sadun, A. A., Carelli, V., ... & Wallace, D. C. (2012). Mouse mtDNA mutant model of Leber hereditary optic neuropathy. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 109(49), 20065–20070. *Zaninello, M., Palikaras, K., Naon, D., Iwata, K., Herkenne, S., Quintana-Cabrera, R., ... & Scorrano, L. (2020). Inhibition of autophagy curtails visual loss in a model of autosomal dominant optic atrophy. Nature communications, 11(1), 1–12.References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sadun, Alfredo Living people American ophthalmologists Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni Albert Einstein College of Medicine alumni Harvard Medical School alumni University of California, Los Angeles faculty 1950 births