News 11/09/2025 10:27

Blind For 20 Years, Man Regains Sight Through His Tooth In Miracle Surgery

After two decades of darkness, a Canadian man can finally see the world again—through a groundbreaking surgery that uses his own tooth to restore vision. His emotional journey from blindness to sight has stunned both doctors and the public alike.

After living in total darkness for two decades, a Canadian man is now seeing the world again—through a medical breakthrough that uses a patient’s own tooth to restore vision. His remarkable journey has been described as nothing short of a miracle.

Brent Chapman, who lost his eyesight as a teenager, has opened up about his extraordinary recovery after undergoing a rare operation known as osteoodonto keratoprosthesis—or more commonly, the “tooth-in-eye” procedure. Earlier this year in Canada, Chapman became one of just three patients to receive the surgery, a complex technique first pioneered in the 1960s.

The process is as unusual as it sounds. Doctors begin by carefully extracting one of the patient’s teeth, which is then implanted into the cheek. Over several months, connective tissue grows around the tooth, strengthening it and making it suitable to support an artificial lens. Once ready, surgeons retrieve the tooth, insert a tiny optical lens inside, and then place the entire structure into the eye socket. This biological support system allows the lens to remain stable, dramatically restoring the patient’s ability to see.

“We need a structure that is strong enough to hold onto the plastic focusing telescope, but is not going to be rejected by the body,” explained Dr. Greg Moloney of Mount Saint Joseph Hospital in Vancouver, who led Chapman’s operation.

Chapman’s struggle with blindness began at age 13. After taking ibuprofen for a sports injury, he experienced a severe reaction that developed into Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS), a rare autoimmune condition that damages the skin and mucous membranes. According to the Mayo Clinic, SJS often starts with flu-like symptoms before progressing into painful rashes and blistering. In Chapman’s case, the condition caused devastating burns across his entire body, including his eyes. Despite undergoing nearly 50 unsuccessful treatments, his vision never returned—until now.

The moment sight was restored was overwhelming. Speaking with ABC 7, Chapman shared: “I feel fantastic. Vision comes back and … it’s a whole new world.” He described the emotional scene when he first made direct eye contact with Dr. Moloney after the procedure: “We both just burst into tears … I hadn’t really looked someone in the eye for 20 years.”

His father, Phil Chapman, recalled their determination throughout the long journey: “We always said to Brent that we would go anywhere, do anything to keep his vision, and here we are.”


Now able to recognize faces, admire landscapes, and witness life in vivid detail again, Chapman says he is eager to spend more quality time with his family and explore the world he has missed for so long. For him, what was once unimaginable has become reality—thanks to the strength of one tooth and the brilliance of medical innovation.

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