[blindza] Fw: Microchip developed by UCSC engineer is helping restore vision to the blind

  • From: "Jacob Kruger" <jacobk@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "BlindZA" <blindza@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 24 Jun 2008 22:39:53 +0200

----- Original Message ----- Microchip developed by UCSC engineer is helping restore

vision to the blind.

June 24, 2008.

Last year, Wentai Liu watched as surgeons implanted a microchip he had
designed into the eye of a blind patient. For Liu, a professor of
electrical engineering in the Baskin School of Engineering at the
University of California, Santa Cruz, it was a major milestone in two
decades of work on an artificial retina to restore vision to the blind.

Ten patients are now enrolled in a clinical trial of the device based on
Liu's microchip at four leading ophthalmic centers in the United States.
Patients are also enrolled in trials in Mexico, Switzerland, France,
and the United Kingdom. Developed through a large collaborative effort
involving biomedical researchers nationwide, the retinal prosthesis is
an implantable electronic device intended for patients blinded by
diseases such as retinitis pigmentosa and age-related macular degeneration.

These diseases destroy the light receptors in the retina, but not the
nerve fibers that connect the eye to the brain. The implanted microchip
stimulates the neurons in the retina, relaying visual signals that are
transmitted to the chip from a tiny video camera integrated into a pair
of sunglasses.

"This chip is very different from those seen in typical electronics
because it is implanted in the body and directly interfaces with a human
organ. There is very little margin for error in such a system," Liu said.

The chip is a core component of the Argus II Retinal Prosthesis System,
produced by Second Sight Medical Products, the commercial partner of the
Artificial Retina Project funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
Office of Science. Liu's work on the chip was funded by the National
Science Foundation (NSF) and later by DOE for further developments.

Liu's pioneering work on the retinal prosthesis began in 1988, when he
teamed up with Dr. Mark Humayun, an ophthalmologist and bioengineer now
at the University of Southern California. The DOE Artificial Retina
consortium now coordinating the project involves three universities,
six national laboratories, and a private company (Second Sight).

A first-generation device (Argus 16, also from Second Sight) delivered
electrical impulses through an array of 16 electrodes attached to the
retina. It was tested on six patients with retinitis pigmentosa between
2002 and 2004, giving them the ability to see patterns of light and
dark, perceive motion, count discrete items, and locate and
differentiate large objects in their environment. The second-generation
Argus II features an array of 60 electrodes and other technological
refinements. And Liu is already working on a third-generation device.

Although the Argus 16 delivered only 16 "pixels" of visual information,
the remarkable plasticity of the human brain enabled patients to make
sense of the signals from the implant and derive meaningful, if quite
limited, perceptions of their environment. The Argus II is expected to
provide patients with a rudimentary form of sight, better than the
earlier version, yet still short of the ultimate goal. The dream that
Liu and his collaborators are working toward is an implant that enables
patients to move independently, recognize faces, and read large print.

The implanted electronic chip that drives the Argus II is a highly
sophisticated system that balances size, power, and safety requirements
to enable an electrical interface with the retina. Wireless transmission
of power and data between the implant and the external video system
eliminates any need for wires penetrating the skin, which would raise
the risk of infections. The implant is about one-fourth the size of the
first-generation device, while providing nearly four times as many
electrodes to stimulate the retinal neurons.

"The development of this chip was a great challenge, but one that is
fulfilling when you see the life-changing benefit it can have. I am
proud of our work," Liu said, adding that the success of the project
owes much to the foresight of agencies such as NSF, DOE, and the
National Institutes of Health, which provided long-term funding for it.

The three-year clinical trial of the Argus II is the only long-term
study of a retinal prosthesis currently under way anywhere in the world.
Ten subjects have been recruited for Phase I of the trial at four
leading ophthalmic centers in the United States. According to Second
Sight, although it is too early to comment on the clinical data, each
device continues to function as expected, and all participants are using
their systems at home daily.

Liu's group is now designing the microelectronics and wireless link
for the next-generation implants, which will be even smaller and more
sophisticated, with more electrodes interfacing with the retina to
provide higher resolution.

"Minimizing the size and power requirements of the implanted device,
optimizing power delivery, and managing reliable communication and data
transmission between implanted and external components are the major
challenges," Liu said.

More information about this project is available at the following web sites:

DOE Artificial Retina Project
http://www.artificialretina.energy.gov/

UCSC Integrated Bioelectronics Research Group
http://ibr.soe.ucsc.edu/

Argus II clinical trials
http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00407602

Source URL:
http://www.ucsc.edu/news_events/press_releases/text.asp?pid=2301


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