I happened to meet the scientist from T I (Texas Instruments) who represents 
the engineering side of this research. I have sought further details on the 
info found in the article. Will post that on the list, once I have it.

Subramani

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Geetha Shamanna
Sent: Friday, February 16, 2007 10:42 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AI] Bionic eye 'on market in two years'

I wonder whether people from other countries can also participate in the 
clinical trials. This sounds very promising indeed.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Subramani L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "M suresh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, February 16, 2007 6:30 PM
Subject: [AI] Bionic eye 'on market in two years'


Bionic eye 'on market in two years' (London Daily Telegraph)

By Nic Fleming, Science Correspondent, in San Francisco Last Updated: 9:15am 
GMT 16/02/2007


A bionic eye that can restore sight to the blind could be on the market 
within two years, according to scientists.

The first six patients to try the revolutionary devices have learnt how to 
detect light, distinguish between objects and perceive direction of motion.

American scientists were this week given approval to test a more advanced 
version of the electronic retinal implant on up to 75 subjects.

The breakthrough offers new hope to millions of people around the world who 
have lost their vision to degenerative eye diseases, particularly those with
macular degeneration - the most common cause of blindness in western 
countries. Up to 15pc of over-75s are affected by the condition.

It will also help those with retinitis pigmentosa, a group of incurable 
inherited eye diseases that cause the degeneration of the photoreceptor 
cells whose
job it is capture and process light. The device takes the place of the 
photoreceptors.

Prof Mark Humayun, from the University of Southern California, who is 
leading the research, yesterday said he had received approval for a clinical 
trial
of the Argus II Retinal Prosthesis System.

Speaking at the American Association for the Advancement of Science 
conference in San Francisco, Prof Humayun said: "We have successfully 
implanted six
patients in the trial.

"We expected that all they would be able to do would be to differentiate 
between light and dark, but were amazed to find they can tell the difference 
between
objects such as a plate, a knife and a cup, and tell which way people are 
moving across their field of vision.

"If the new trial hits its milestones the second generation implant could be 
commercially available in two years."

The device, manufactured by the California-based company Second Sight 
Medical Products, comes in two parts.

A tiny camera in the lens or on the bridge of a pair of light-weight glasses 
captures images in real time. This information is transmitted to a radio 
receiver
implanted behind the patient's ear which converts it to electrical signals 
that are sent to a grid of electrodes implanted in the retina.

These electrodes stimulate retinal nerve cells to produce electrical 
impulses which send signals to the brain so that the patient can see spots 
of light
occurring in different patterns.

For example, the technology can be programmed to represent a as a U-shaped 
pattern of light dots, while a circle of dots might indicate the presence of
a plate.

The first six patients, who all have retinitis pigmentosa, took one to two 
months to learn to use the device, with those with higher educational 
standards
taking less time.

While the first generation device had 16 electrodes in a square on a 4mm by 
5mm silicon and platinum chip attached to the retina, the new one has 60 
electrodes,
hopefully giving patients higher resolution images of more objects.

The Argus II, which costs around £15,000, is also approximately one quarter 
the size of the original, reducing surgery and recovery times. It cannot 
help
those whose optic nerves that had been cut or in patients who have had 
strokes that have affected the brain's information to process nerve signals.

Prof Humayun added that he hoped to produce a third generation implant with 
1,000 electrodes which could allow more advanced tasks such as face 
recognition
within seven years.

Meanwhile, researchers at Duke University announced they had moved a step 
closer to creating a "smart bladder pacemaker" that might one day restore 
bladder
control in patients with spinal cord injury or nervous system diseases.

Warren Grill, Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Duke's Pratt 
School of Engineering, and colleagues used electrical stimulation of parts 
of
the spines of cats to control the contraction and release of muscles that 
control the emptying of the bladder.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of M suresh
Sent: Friday, February 16, 2007 1:12 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AI] Sorry

Hello friends,

I am really sorry for the inconvenience. With out realizing that access 
India is only to discus Computer related topics, I have sent some irrelavent 
information about Gulabi's (Visually impaired) financial assistance.

I also would like to bring it your notice that Enable India is no way 
affiliated with this matter.

I am sorry for the inconvenience.




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