Did you know that every eye is unique and could be used to identify individuals. This uniqueness of the eye is similar to a fingerprint. The retinal blood vessels enter the back of the eye through an opening in the optic nerve (the cord that takes visual information from the eye toward visual center in the brain). The retinal blood vessels extend throughout the back, inside-surface of the eye in a branching tree-like pattern. Every eye has a unique blood vessel pattern, which should stay the same throughout ones lifetime.
Your retinal blood vessels should be viewed every year by an eye doctor. The eye doctors at Iowa EyeCare use these blood vessels as clues for diagnosing conditions like diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and other whole-body diseases. In these instances, and many others, such as retinal detachment, glaucoma and macular degeneration, the inside of the eye can change slightly in its appearance.
The use of retinal scans for identification is not widely practiced. For livestock, however, these scans are commonplace. In fact, 4-H meat goats, sheep and beef cattle are scanned when individuals intend to show them for the Linn County Fair and Iowa State Fair. This practice ensures that the same animal being raised and shown, and that no switching of animals has occured.
Tags: disease, glaucoma, macular degeneration, retina



That is really interesting! I guess Hollywood wasn’t lying to us in movies such as True Lies, where Arnold gets his eye scanned to gain access to the top secret government offices…