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The Argus II Retinal Prosthesis System: Sight for the Blind

 

For people who have gone blind from degenerative eye diseases like macular degeneration and retinitis pigmentosa. Both diseases damage the eyes’ photoreceptors, the cells at the back of the retina that perceive light patterns and pass them on to the brain in the form of nerve impulses, where the impulse patterns are then interpreted as images.

 

The Argus II system takes the place of these photoreceptors.
Second Sight’s retinal prosthesis consists of five main parts:

The Bionic Eye

The entire system runs on a battery pack that’s housed with the video processing unit.

It takes some training for a person who has undergone this operation to actually see a tree. At first, they see mostly light and dark spots. But after a while, they learn to interpret what the brain is showing them, and they eventually perceive that pattern of light and dark as a tree.

On March 24, 2015 a cutting-edge procedure was carried out by Dr. Gregg T. Kokame of the Hawaii Eye Surgery Center. This surgery comes two years later after the first bionic implant of a prototype conducted by researchers from Bionic Vision Australia. After the four-hour surgery a 72-year-old woman who had been blind for two years said that she had started to see shades of grey.

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