Optoelectronic retinal prosthesis: system design and performance

被引:94
作者
Loudin, J. D.
Simanovskii, D. M.
Vijayraghavan, K.
Sramek, C. K.
Butterwick, A. F.
Huie, P.
McLean, G. Y.
Palanker, D. V.
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Hansen Expt Phys Lab, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[2] Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Dept Ophthalmol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[3] Optobionics Corp, Palo Alto, CA 94303 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1088/1741-2560/4/1/S09
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 ;
摘要
The design of high-resolution retinal prostheses presents many unique engineering and biological challenges. Ever smaller electrodes must inject enough charge to stimulate nerve cells, within electrochemically safe voltage limits. Stimulation sites should be placed within an electrode diameter from the target cells to prevent 'blurring' and minimize current. Signals must be delivered wirelessly from an external source to a large number of electrodes, and visual information should, ideally, maintain its natural link to eye movements. Finally, a good system must have a wide range of stimulation currents, external control of image processing and the option of either anodic-first or cathodic-first pulses. This paper discusses these challenges and presents solutions to them for a system based on a photodiode array implant. Video frames are processed and imaged onto the retinal implant by a head-mounted near-to-eye projection system operating at near-infrared wavelengths. Photodiodes convert light into pulsed electric current, with charge injection maximized by applying a common biphasic bias waveform. The resulting prosthesis will provide stimulation with a frame rate of up to 50 Hz in a central 10 degrees visual field, with a full 30 degrees field accessible via eye movements. Pixel sizes are scalable from 100 to 25 mu m, corresponding to 640-10 000 pixels on an implant 3 mm in diameter.
引用
收藏
页码:S72 / S84
页数:13
相关论文
共 41 条
[1]  
BOOTH KM, 1998, ESSENCE ENG
[2]   ELECTRICAL-STIMULATION OF NERVOUS-SYSTEM - PRINCIPLE OF SAFE CHARGE INJECTION WITH NOBLE-METAL ELECTRODES [J].
BRUMMER, SB ;
TURNER, MJ .
BIOELECTROCHEMISTRY AND BIOENERGETICS, 1975, 2 (01) :13-25
[3]  
BUTTERWICK A, OPHTHALMIC TECHNOLOG, V16
[4]   Potential-biased, asymmetric waveforms for charge-injection with activated iridium oxide (AIROF) neural stimulation electrodes [J].
Cogan, SF ;
Troyk, PR ;
Ehrlich, J ;
Plante, TD ;
Detlefsen, DE .
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, 2006, 53 (02) :327-332
[5]   In vitro comparison of the charge-injection limits of activated iridium oxide (AIROF) and platinum-iridium microelectrodes [J].
Cogan, SF ;
Troyk, PR ;
Ehrlich, J ;
Plante, TD .
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, 2005, 52 (09) :1612-1614
[6]   Over-pulsing degrades activated iridium oxide films used for intracortical neural stimulation [J].
Cogan, SF ;
Guzelian, AA ;
Agnew, WF ;
Yuen, TGH ;
McCreery, DB .
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE METHODS, 2004, 137 (02) :141-150
[7]   Stimulation via a subretinally placed prosthetic elicits central activity and induces a trophic effect on visual responses [J].
DeMarco, Paul J., Jr. ;
Yarbrough, Gary L. ;
Yee, Christopher W. ;
McLean, George Y. ;
Sagdullaev, Botir T. ;
Ball, Sherry L. ;
McCall, Maureen A. .
INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 2007, 48 (02) :916-926
[8]   Exploration of a dialog-based tunable retina encoder for retina implants [J].
Eckmiller, R ;
Hünermann, R ;
Becker, M .
NEUROCOMPUTING, 1999, 26-7 :1005-1011
[9]  
FLANNERY JG, 1989, INVEST OPHTH VIS SCI, V30, P191
[10]   Histological measurement of retinal nerve fibre layer thickness [J].
Frenkel, S ;
Morgan, JE ;
Blumenthal, EZ .
EYE, 2005, 19 (05) :491-498