Stanford: A team led by Stanford University
researchers has developed a wireless retinal implant that they say
could restore vision five times better than existing devices. Results in rat studies suggest it could provide functional vision to
patients with retinal degenerative diseases, such as retinitis
pigmentosa or macular degeneration.
A paper describing the implant was published online April 27 in Nature Medicine.
“The performance we’re observing at the moment is very encouraging,” said Georges Goetz, a lead author of the paper and graduate student in electrical engineering at Stanford. “Based on our current results, we hope that human recipients of this implant will be able to recognize objects and move about.”
Retinal degenerative diseases destroy photoreceptors — the retina’s rods and cones — but other parts of the eye usually remain healthy. The implant capitalizes on the electrical excitability of retinal neurons known as bipolar cells. These cells process the photoreceptors’ inputs before they reach ganglion cells, which send retinal signals to the brain. By stimulating bipolar cells, the implant takes advantage of important natural properties of the retinal neural network, which produces more refined images than the devices that skip these cells.
Made of silicon, the implant is composed of hexagonal photovoltaic pixels that convert light transmitted from special glasses worn by the recipient into electrical current. These electrical pulses then stimulate the retina’s bipolar cells, triggering a neural cascade that reaches the brain.
So far, the team has tested the device only in animals, but a
clinical trial is planned next year in France, in collaboration with a
French company called Pixium Vision, said Daniel Palanker,
PhD, professor of ophthalmology and a senior author of the paper.
Initially, patients blinded by a genetic disease called retinitis
pigmentosa will be included in the study.
A paper describing the implant was published online April 27 in Nature Medicine.
“The performance we’re observing at the moment is very encouraging,” said Georges Goetz, a lead author of the paper and graduate student in electrical engineering at Stanford. “Based on our current results, we hope that human recipients of this implant will be able to recognize objects and move about.”
Retinal degenerative diseases destroy photoreceptors — the retina’s rods and cones — but other parts of the eye usually remain healthy. The implant capitalizes on the electrical excitability of retinal neurons known as bipolar cells. These cells process the photoreceptors’ inputs before they reach ganglion cells, which send retinal signals to the brain. By stimulating bipolar cells, the implant takes advantage of important natural properties of the retinal neural network, which produces more refined images than the devices that skip these cells.
Made of silicon, the implant is composed of hexagonal photovoltaic pixels that convert light transmitted from special glasses worn by the recipient into electrical current. These electrical pulses then stimulate the retina’s bipolar cells, triggering a neural cascade that reaches the brain.
Clinical trial planned
So far, the team has tested the device only in animals, but a
clinical trial is planned next year in France, in collaboration with a
French company called Pixium Vision, said Daniel Palanker,
PhD, professor of ophthalmology and a senior author of the paper.
Initially, patients blinded by a genetic disease called retinitis
pigmentosa will be included in the study.
Daniel Palanker
Next, Palanker and his team plan to further improve acuity by developing chips with smaller pixels. To ensure the signals reach the target neurons, they plan to add a tiny prong to each electrode that will protrude into the target cell layer.
“Eventually, we hope this technology will restore vision of 20/120,” Palanker said. “And if it works that well, it will become relevant to patients with age-related macular degeneration.”