A team of EPFL engineers has developed technology that could partially restore vision in blind people. The study is published in Communications Materials.
Restoring eyesight has always
been one of the biggest challenges for scientists. Diego Ghezzi, who holds the
Medtronic Chair in Neuroengineering (LNE) at EPFL’s School of Engineering, has
made this issue a research focus. Since 2015, he and his team have been
developing a retinal implant that works with camera-equipped smart
glasses and a microcomputer.
“Our system is designed to give blind
people a form of artificial vision by using electrodes to stimulate their
retinal cells,” says Ghezzi.
The camera embedded in the
smart glasses captures images in the wearer’s field of vision, and sends the
data to a microcomputer placed in one of the eyeglasses’ end-pieces. The
microcomputer turns the data into light signals that are transmitted
to electrodes in the retinal implant.
The electrodes then stimulate
the retina in such a way that the wearer sees a simplified, black-and-white
version of the image. This simplified version is made up of dots of light that
appear when the retinal cells are stimulated. However, wearers must learn to
interpret the many dots of light in order to make out shapes and objects. “It’s
like when you look at stars in the night sky—you can learn to recognize
specific constellations. Blind patients would see something similar with our
system,” says Ghezzi.
Running
simulations, for now
The only catch is that the
system has not yet been tested on humans. The research team first needs to be
certain of their results. “We aren’t yet authorized to implant our device
in human patients, since obtaining the medical approval takes a long time.
But we came up with a process for testing it virtually—a type of work-around,”
says Ghezzi. More specifically, the engineers developed a virtual reality
program that can simulate what patients would see with the implants. Their
findings have been published in Communication Materials.
Field
of vision and resolution
Two parameters are used to
measure vision: field of vision and resolution. The engineers therefore used
these same two parameters to evaluate their system. The retinal implants they
developed contain 10,500 electrodes, with each one serving to generate a dot of
light. “We weren’t sure if this would be too many electrodes or not enough. We
had to find just the right number so that the reproduced image doesn’t become
too hard to make out. The dots have to be far enough apart that patients can
distinguish two of them close to each other, but there has to be enough of them
to provide sufficient image resolution,” says Ghezzi.
The engineers also had to
make sure that each electrode could reliably produce a dot of light.
Ghezzi explains: “We wanted to make sure that two electrodes don’t stimulate
the same part of the retina. So we carried out electrophysiological tests that
involved recording the activity of retinal ganglion cells. And the results
confirmed that each electrode does indeed activate a different part of the
retina.”
The next step was to check
whether 10,500 light dots provide good enough resolution—and that’s
where the virtual reality program came in. “Our simulations showed that the
chosen number of dots, and therefore of electrodes, works well. Using any more
wouldn’t deliver any real benefits to patients in terms of definition,” says
Ghezzi.
The engineers also performed
tests at constant resolution but different field-of-vision angles. “We started
at five degrees and opened up the field all the way to 45 degrees. We found
that the saturation point is 35 degrees—the object remains stable beyond that
point,” says Ghezzi.
All these experiments
demonstrated that the system’s capacity doesn’t need to be improved any
further, and that it’s ready for clinical trials. But the team will have to
wait a little longer before their technology can be implanted in actual
patients. For now, restoring vision remains in the realm of science
fiction.
Source: https://www.epfl.ch/en/
Journal article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s43246-021-00133-2
Source: Retinal Implants Can Give Artificial Vision to the Blind – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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