Ocular Melanoma

Ocular melanoma  is a sort of cancer that progresses in the cells that create pigment  the constituent that provides your skin, hair and eyes color. Just as you can grow tumor on your skin, you can also mature it in your eye. Even though it is the peak mutual eye cancer in adults, visual malignancy is uncommon.


Ophthalmic tumors frequently arise in the middle of the three layers of your eye. The external layer of your eye is the sclera, the solid white partition of the eye. The deepest layer is the retina, which minds light and supports to direct pictures to your brain. The central layer among the sclera and retina is named the uvea. The uvea comprises several blood vessels  veins, arteries and capillaries  that carry body fluid to and after the eye.

  • melanoma of the eye
  • intraocular melanoma
  • conjunctival melanoma
  • ciliary body melanoma
  • Metastasis

Related Conference of Ocular Melanoma

September 16-17, 2025

20th International Conference on Ophthalmology and Vision Science

Amsterdam, Netherlands
September 22-23, 2025

8th International Eye and Vision Congress

Amsterdam, Netherlands
October 20-21, 2025

6th World Congress on Ophthalmology and Vision Science

Barcelona, Spain
November 03-04, 2025

39th European Ophthalmology Congress

Rome, Italy
January 12-13, 2026

26th Global Ophthalmologists Annual Meeting

London, UK
April 20-21, 2026

3rd International Conference on Ophthalmology

Barcelona, Spain
May 07-08, 2026

7th International Conference on Optometry

Paris, France
May 25-26, 2026

10th World Congress on Eye and Vision

Madrid, Spain

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