Bionic eye brings amazed woman some sight

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
5
36
London, Ontario
Bionic eye brings amazed woman some sight
By Thuy Ong, Reuters

SYDNEY - A bionic eye has given an Australian woman partial sight and researchers say it is an important step towards eventually helping visually impaired people get around independently.
Dianne Ashworth, who has severe vision loss due to the inherited condition retinitis pigmentosa, was fitted with a prototype bionic eye in May at the Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital. It was switched on a month later.
“All of a sudden I could see a little flash ... it was amazing,” she said in a statement.
“Every time there was stimulation there was a different shape that appeared in front of my eye.”
The bionic eye, designed, built and tested by the Bionic Vision Australia, a consortium of researchers partially funded by the Australian government, is equipped with 24 electrodes with a small wire that extends from the back of the eye to a receptor attached behind the ear.
It is inserted into the choroidal space, the space next to the retina within the eye.


“The device electrically stimulates the retina,” said Dr Penny Allen, a specialist surgeon who implanted the prototype.
“Electrical impulses are passed through the device, which then stimulate the retina. Those impulses then pass back to the brain (creating the image).”
The device restores mild vision, where patients are able to pick up major contrasts and edges such as light and dark objects. Researchers hope to develop it so blind patients can achieve independent mobility.
“Di is the first patient of three with this prototype device, the next step is analysing the visual information that we are getting from the stimulation,” Allen said.
The operation itself was made simple so it can be readily taught to eye surgeons worldwide.
“We didn’t want to have a device that was too complex in a surgical approach that was very difficult to learn,” Allen.
Similar research has been conducted at Cornell University in New York by researchers who have deciphered the neural code, which are the pulses that transfer information to the brain, in mice.
The researchers have developed a prosthetic device that has succeeded in restoring near-normal sight to blind mice.
According to the World Health Organisation, 39 million people around the world are blind and 246 million have low vision.
“What we’re going to be doing is restoring a type of vision which is probably going to be black and white, but what we’re hoping to do for these patients who are severely visually impaired is to give them mobility,” Allen said.



Bionic eye brings amazed woman some sight - Science - Canoe.ca


“What we’re going to be doing is restoring a type of vision which is probably going to be black and white, but what we’re hoping to do for these patients who are severely visually impaired is to give them mobility,” Allen said.
A very cool first step and what will surely be a Godsend to many! :)
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
5
36
London, Ontario
Excellent news for a change! Thanks for that:smile:

Thanks Skookumchuck! I try to keep and eye open (no pun intended...oh, who am I kidding;)) for positive and interesting stuff when I can find it.

We need a little uplifting news to read from time to time, eh?

I read about that too. Very cool.

There was also an article today about how they used Formula-1 engineering techniques to improve our ability to fashion eardrum replacements. Let me see if I can find it...

Scientists use F1 technology to repair damaged eardrums | Business Standard

Amazing how they can help people these days.

That is really neat as well.

You know, one thing I did think of when reading about this bionic eye, I wonder if we will start to hear about blind or vision-impaired culture the way we heard about deaf culture when the cochlear implant first came out? Although I can kind of see what they're talking about it, I still find it a bit difficult to wrap my head around that concept completely.
 

Niflmir

A modern nomad
Dec 18, 2006
3,460
58
48
Leiden, the Netherlands
That is really neat as well.

You know, one thing I did think of when reading about this bionic eye, I wonder if we will start to hear about blind or vision-impaired culture the way we heard about deaf culture when the cochlear implant first came out? Although I can kind of see what they're talking about it, I still find it a bit difficult to wrap my head around that concept completely.

I seem to see a lot more blind people over here in Europe than I did back in Canada. It might have more to do with the fact that I grew up in a relatively rural area and now live in a heavily urban country. This morning biking to work there was a blind woman with the white cane crossing the street in front of me, any other pedestrian would have waited for me to pass by, but obviously a blind person will not notice a quiet bicycle. I dutifully let her pass.

I guess many of them are not fully blind but need the cane to be sure of themselves and also to signify to other people that they will not behave like you would expect them to. It is quite common to see more than one blind person at the same time as well, I imagine it is easier to relate to other blind people.
 

#juan

Hall of Fame Member
Aug 30, 2005
18,326
119
63
I seem to see a lot more blind people over here in Europe than I did back in Canada. It might have more to do with the fact that I grew up in a relatively rural area and now live in a heavily urban country. This morning biking to work there was a blind woman with the white cane crossing the street in front of me, any other pedestrian would have waited for me to pass by, but obviously a blind person will not notice a quiet bicycle. I dutifully let her pass.

I guess many of them are not fully blind but need the cane to be sure of themselves and also to signify to other people that they will not behave like you would expect them to. It is quite common to see more than one blind person at the same time as well, I imagine it is easier to relate to other blind people.

This is great. Though this first effort is only a few pixels so to speak, in another ten years or so I would bet it will be a lot closer to
actual sight and blind people will see. Hell of a first step.