Objective. Retinal prosthetic devices hold great promise for the treatment of retinal degenerative diseases such as retinitis pigmentosa and age-related macular degeneration. Through electrical stimulation of the surviving retinal neurons, these devices evoke visual signals that are then relayed to the brain. Currently, the visual prostheses used in clinical trials have few electrodes, thus limiting visual acuity. Electrode arrays with high electrode densities have been developed using novel technologies, including diamond growth and laser machining, and these may provide a more promising route to achieve high visual acuity in blind patients. Approach. Here, we studied the potential spatial resolution of electrical stimulation using diamond electrodes. We did this by labeling retinal ganglion cells in whole mount retina with a calcium indicator in wild-type rats and those with retinal degeneration. We imaged the ganglion cell responses to a range of stimulation parameters, including pulse duration and return electrode configuration. Main results. With sub-retinal stimulation, in which electrodes were in contact with the intact or degenerated photoreceptor layer, we found that biphasic pulses of 0.1 ms phase duration and a local return configuration was the most effective in confining the retinal ganglion cell activation patterns, while also remaining within the safety limits of the materials and providing the best power efficiency. Significance. These results provide an optimized stimulation strategy for retinal implants, which if implemented in a retinal prosthetic is expected to improve the achievable visual acuity.
A novel, ultrasound based approach for the dynamic stimulation and promotion of tissue healing processes employing surface acoustic waves (SAW) on a chip is presented for the example of osteoblast-like SaOs-2 cells. In our investigations, we directly irradiate cells with SAW on a SiO2 covered piezoelectric LiNbO3 substrate. Observing the temporal evolution of cell growth and migration and comparing non-irradiated to irradiated areas on the chip, we find that the SAW-treated cells exhibit a significantly increased migration as compared to the control samples. Apart from quantifying our experimental findings on the cell migration stimulation, we also demonstrate the full bio compatibility and bio functionality of our SAW technique by using LDH assays. We safely exclude parasitic side effects such as a SAW related increased substrate temperature or nutrient flow by thoroughly monitoring the temperature and the flow field using infrared microscopy and micro particle image velocimetry. Our results show that the SAW induced dynamic mechanical and electrical stimulation obviously directly promotes the cell growth. We conclude that this stimulation method offers a powerful platform for future medical treatment, e.g. being implemented as a implantable biochip with wireless extra-corporal power supply to treat deeper tissue.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.