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Wireless Vision Implant: Implantable Prosthesis Lets Patients Perceive
Visual Images
ScienceDaily (June 2, 2008) — About 30 million people around the world
have grown legally blind due to retinal diseases. The EPI-RET project
has sought for a technical solution for the past twelve years to help
these patients. This work has resulted in a unique system – a fully
implantable visual prosthesis.

For twelve years, experts from different disciplines in the fields of
microelectronics, neurophysics, information engineering, computer
science, materials science and medicine have been working to develop a
visual prosthetic device for patients who have lost their sight
through diseases of the retina.
In September 2007, their effort was rewarded. In a clinical study
including six patients, the team was able to demonstrate not only that
a completely implantable vision prosthesis is technically feasible and
proven functioning, but also that it enables patients to perceive
visual images.
"For normally sighted people that may not seem much, but for the
Blind, it is a major step," comments Dr. Hoc Khiem Trieu from the
Fraunhofer Institute for Microelectronic Circuits and Systems IMS in
Duisburg. "After years of blindness, the patients were able to see
spots of light or geometric patterns, depending on how the nerve cells
were stimulated."
Dr. Hoc Khiem Trieu has been involved from the outset of this project,
which was funded by the German Ministry of Education and Research.
Together with Dr. Ingo Krisch and Dipl.-Ing. Michael Görtz he
translated the specifications given by the medical experts and
material scientists into an implant and chip design. The scientists
are to receive the Joseph von Fraunhofer Prize 2008 for their work.
"A milestone was reached when the prosthetic system finally operated
wirelessly and remotely controlled," explains Dr. Ingo Krisch. "A
great deal of detailed work was necessary before the implant could be
activated without any external cable connections."
"The designs became smaller and smaller, the materials more flexible,
more robust and higher in performance, so that the implant now fits
comfortably in the eye," reports Michael Görtz. The system benefits
from a particular disease pattern, and it uses a specific operating
principle to restore sight: Suffering from retinitis pigmentosa, the
light sensitive cells are destroyed, but the connection of the nerve
cells to the brain remains intact.
The scientists have bypassed the defects of the retina by means of a
visual prosthesis. The complete system comprises the implant and an
external transmitter integrated in a spectacle-frame. The implant
system converts the image patterns into interpretable stimulation
signals. Data and energy are transferred to the implant by a
telemetric link. The nerve cells inside the eye are then stimulated
according to the captured images. Those intact cells are innervated by
means of three-dimensional stimulation electrodes that rest against
the retina like small studs.
EPI-RET GmbH, a spin-off of this project consortium, intends to market
the vision prosthesis in about three years' time after a new clinical
study of selected patients has been completed with the final product.

References:
Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft (2008, June 2). Wireless Vision Implant:
Implantable Prosthesis Lets Patients Perceive Visual Images.
ScienceDaily. Retrieved October 12, 2008, from
http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2008/05/080529105357.htm

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