Tiny Solar-Panel-Like Cells Help Restore Sight to the Blind
May 13, 2012 — Using tiny
solar-panel-like cells surgically placed underneath the retina,
scientists at the Stanford University School of Medicine have devised a
system that may someday restore sight to people who have lost vision
because of certain types of degenerative eye diseases.
This
pinpoint-sized photovoltaic chip (upper right corner) is implanted under
the retina in a blind rat to restore sight. The center image shows how
the chip is comprised of an array of photodiodes, which can be activated
by pulsed near-infrared light to stimulate neural signals in the eye
that propagate then to the brain. A higher magnification view [lower
left corner] shows a single pixel of the implant, which has three diodes
around the perimeter and an electrode in the center. The diodes turn
light into an electric current which flows from the chip into the inner
layer of retinal cells (Credit: Courtesy of the Daniel Palanker lab)
This device -- a new type of retinal prosthesis -- involves a
specially designed pair of goggles, which are equipped with a miniature
camera and a pocket PC that is designed to process the visual data
stream. The resulting images would be displayed on a liquid crystal
microdisplay embedded in the goggles, similar to what's used in video
goggles for gaming. Unlike the regular video goggles, though, the images
would be beamed from the LCD using laser pulses of near-infrared light
to a photovoltaic silicon chip -- one-third as thin as a strand of hair
-- implanted beneath the retina.
Electric currents from the photodiodes on the chip would then trigger
signals in the retina, which then flow to the brain, enabling a patient
to regain vision.
A study, to be published online May 13 in Nature Photonics,
discusses how scientists tested the photovoltaic stimulation using the
prosthetic device's diode arrays in rat retinas in vitro and how they
elicited electric responses, which are widely accepted indicators of
visual activity, from retinal cells . The scientists are now testing the
system in live rats, taking both physiological and behavioral
measurements, and are hoping to find a sponsor to support tests in
humans.
"It works like the solar panels on your roof, converting light into
electric current," said Daniel Palanker, PhD, associate professor of
ophthalmology and one of the paper's senior authors. "But instead of the
current flowing to your refrigerator, it flows into your retina."
Palanker is also a member of the Hansen Experimental Physics Laboratory
at Stanford and of the interdisciplinary Stanford research program,
Bio-X. The study's other senior author is Alexander Sher, PhD, of the
Santa Cruz Institute of Particle Physics at UC Santa Cruz; its co-first
authors are Keith Mathieson, PhD, a visiting scholar in Palanker's lab,
and James Loudin, PhD, a postdoctoral scholar. Palanker and Loudin
jointly conceived and designed the prosthesis system and the
photovoltaic arrays.
There are several other retinal prostheses being developed, and at
least two of them are in clinical trials. A device made by the Los
Angeles-based company Second Sight was approved in April for use in
Europe, and another prosthesis-maker, a German company called Retina
Implant AG, announced earlier this month results from its clinical
testing in Europe.
Unlike these other devices -- which require coils, cables or antennas
inside the eye to deliver power and information to the retinal implant
-- the Stanford device uses near-infrared light to transmit images,
thereby avoiding any need for wires and cables, and making the device
thin and easily implantable.
"The current implants are very bulky, and the surgery to place the
intraocular wiring for receiving, processing and power is difficult,"
Palanker said. The device developed by his team, he noted, has virtually
all of the hardware incorporated externally into the goggles. "The
surgeon needs only to create a small pocket beneath the retina and then
slip the photovoltaic cells inside it." What's more, one can tile these
photovoltaic cells in larger numbers inside the eye to provide a wider
field of view than the other systems can offer, he added.
Stanford University holds patents on two technologies used in the
system, and Palanker and colleagues would receive royalties from the
licensing of these patents.
The proposed prosthesis is intended to help people suffering from
retinal degenerative diseases, such as age-related macular degeneration
and retinitis pigmentosa. The former is the foremost cause of vision
loss in North America, and the latter causes an estimated 1.5 million
people worldwide to lose sight, according to the nonprofit group
Foundation Fighting Blindness. In these diseases, the retina's
photoreceptor cells slowly degenerate, ultimately leading to blindness.
But the inner retinal neurons that normally transmit signals from the
photoreceptors to the brain are largely unscathed. Retinal prostheses
are based on the idea that there are other ways to stimulate those
neurons.
The Stanford device uses near-infrared light, which has longer
wavelength than normal visible light. It's necessary to use such an
approach because people blinded by retinal degenerative diseases still
have photoreceptor cells, which continue to be sensitive to visible
light. "To make this work, we have to deliver a lot more light than
normal vision would require," said Palanker. "And if we used visible
light, it would be painfully bright." Near-infrared light isn't visible
to the naked eye, though it is "visible" to the diodes that are
implanted as part of this prosthetic system, he said.
Palanker explained what he's done by comparing the eye to camera, in
which the retina is the film or the digital chip, and each photoreceptor
is a pixel. "In our model we replace those photoreceptors with
photosensitive diodes," he said. "Every pixel is like a little solar
cell; you send light, then you get current and that current stimulates
neurons in the inner nuclear layer of the retina." That, in turn, should
have a cascade effect, activating the ganglion cells on the outer layer
of the retina, which send the visual information to the brain that
allows us to see.
For this study, Palanker and his team fabricated a chip about the
size of a pencil point that contains hundreds of these light-sensitive
diodes. To test how these chips responded, the researchers used retinas
from both normal rats and blind rats that serve as models of retinal
degenerative disease. The scientists placed an array of photodiodes
beneath the retinas and placed a multi-electrode array above the layer
of ganglion cells to gauge their activity. The scientists then sent
pulses of light, both visible and near-infrared, to produce electric
current in the photodiodes and measured the response in the outer layer
of the retinas.
In the normal rats, the ganglions were stimulated, as expected, by
the normal visible light, but they also presented a similar response to
the near-infrared light: That's confirmation that the diodes were
triggering neural activity.
In the degenerative rat retinas, the normal light elicited little
response, but the near-infrared light prompted strong spikes in activity
roughly similar to what occurred in the normal rat retinas. "They
didn't respond to normal light, but they did to infrared," said
Palanker. "This way the sight is restored with our system." He noted
that the degenerated rat retinas required greater amounts of
near-infrared light to achieve the same level of activity as the normal
rat retinas.
While there was concern that exposure to such doses of near-infrared
light could cause the tissue to heat up, the study found that the
irradiation was still one-hundredth of the established ocular safety
limit.
Since completing the study, Palanker and his colleagues have
implanted the photodiodes in rats' eyes and been observing and measuring
their effect for the last six months. He said preliminary data
indicates that the visual signals are reaching the brain in normal and
in blind rats, though the study is still under way.
While this and other devices could help people to regain some sight,
the current technologies do not allow people to see color, and the
resulting vision is far from normal, Palanker said.
source:sciencedaily
No comments:
Post a Comment