Scientists Restore Vision to Mice with Blinding Disease

Scientists have created a prosthetic device capable of restoring normal sight in people suffering from neurological forms of blindness. The device translates what the eye perceives into neural code that is deciphered by the brain, something other prosthetics do not do.

In neurodegenerative diseases such as macular degeneration or retinitis pigmentosa, blindness occurs because light-sensitive cells or photoreceptors on the retina in the back of the eye fail, and so the retina is no longer able to send signals to the brain for processing. But typically the retina's ganglion cells - which transmit images to the brain - are spared. Scientists use these surviving cells to build prosthetic devices, implanting electrodes in patients' eyes to stimulate what remains of the visual circuitry. The result, says neurophysiologist Sheila Nirenberg, is a rough, poor visual field.