The loss of eyesight, often caused by retinal degeneration, is a life-altering health issue for many people, especially as they age. But a new development toward a prosthetic retina could help counter conditions that result from problems with this crucial part of the eye. Scientists published their research on a new device, which they tested on tissue from laboratory animals, in the ACS journal Nano Letters. Yael Hanein and colleagues point out that a growing range of medical devices has become available to treat conditions, including visual impairment, that involve sending
sensory1 signals to the brain. Patients with one type of eye
disorder2 called age-related macular degeneration (AMD), for example, could potentially benefit from such a device, they say. AMD usually affects people age 60 or older who have damage to a specific part of the retina, limiting their vision. Scientists are trying different approaches to develop an
implant3 that can "see" light and send visual signals to a person's brain, countering the effects of AMD and related vision
disorders4. But many attempts so far use
metallic5 parts,
cumbersome6 wiring or have low resolution. The researchers, an interdisciplinary team from Tel Aviv University, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Centers for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology and Newcastle University, wanted to make a more compact device.
The researchers combined
semiconductor7 nanorods and carbon nanotubes to create a
wireless8, light-sensitive, flexible film that could potentially act in the place of a damaged retina. When they tested it with a chick retina that normally doesn't respond to light, they found that the film absorbed light and, in response, sparked neuronal activity. In comparison with other technologies, the researchers conclude theirs is more
durable9, flexible and efficient, as well as better able to
stimulate10 neurons.
The authors acknowledge funding from the Israel
Ministry11 of Science and Technology, the European Research Council and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council.