What were they thinking?
Did you know? I only watch one television show from network television, but it shall remain nameless here, so as not to spoil the plot of a recent episode. The reason I write, is that the climax of this episode occurs when a character reveals that she has been cured of her retinitis pigmentosa by a corneal transplant! If this were true, it would be a first.
The eye is like a camera. The retina is like film in a camera (okay, like the digital sensor), lining the BACK of the eye. In retinitis pigmentosa, the retina deteriorates. There is no known cure for retinitis pigmentosa at this time.
The cornea is the clear window on the FRONT of the eye. There are many conditions which lead to a damaged cornea (such as getting lye splashed into your eyes, or from keratoconus, which causes the cornea to be misshaped). A cornea transplant will cure these conditions, but it is not related in any way to the retina!
In this same show last season, its title character had a noxious substance thrown into his eyes. A doctor peers into his eyes and declares that his optic nerves had been damaged! This is also ludicrous, as the optic nerve enters the rear of the eye, whereas if a dangerous substance splashes into the eye (as opposed to forceful trauma) one may worry about damage to the cornea.

Did you also know? This same network produces the medical show, House, with its complex and ingenious medical story lines. Surely they can afford to have their medical consultants (or maybe House!) take a few minutes to proofread the other shows in their lineup.
(image from NIH)

