Monday, July 12, 2010

Artificial Retina offers new Hope

TUCSON - There is new hope for millions of people losing their vision. Many are going blind because of age-related macular degeneration and other conditions. But a new device called Artificial Retina has people seeing and believing.

Dean Lloyd is one of 14 people in the United States seeing through an Artifical Retina. He lost his vision in 1974. Lloyd says, "I almost lost all my vision in six months." Then in 2007, after a three hour operation, his sight, though limited, returned. "The beauty of the human brain is when you've had sight at one time, the brain seems to save the images," he said.

The camera on Dean's glasses captures an image and sends it wirelessly to an implant in his eye that stimulates his optic nerve to create an image in his brain. The next generation for Dean's implant is one that could help him see details and faces.

Satinderpall Pannu heads the Artificial Retina project at Lawrence Livermore labs in California. Starting with a silicon wafer and a thin coating of polymer, the disk is processed, electrodes are added and the implant is encased in titanium and gold, "It's a very rewarding feeling. It's amazing to me that technology that we've developed here at the lab can actually restore someone's sight," Pannu said.

Pannu says in 10 years, 50 million people in the world will suffer from blindness that these implants could reverse, "We really would like to take this tech to have a digital camera embedded in your retina and be able to restore your vision completely."

The only clinical trials for the artificial retina in the U.S. are run through a California Company "Second Sight."

Project leaders at Lawrence Livermore say they only have funding through next year. Right now, they're trying to lobby congress to extend the project's 8-million dollar a year budget, to improve the implant.

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