RESUMEN
In patients blinded by geographic atrophy, a subretinal photovoltaic implant with 100 µm pixels provided visual acuity closely matching the pixel pitch. However, such flat bipolar pixels cannot be scaled below 75 µm, limiting the attainable visual acuity. This limitation can be overcome by shaping the electric field with 3-dimensional (3-D) electrodes. In particular, elevating the return electrode on top of the honeycomb-shaped vertical walls surrounding each pixel extends the electric field vertically and decouples its penetration into tissue from the pixel width. This approach relies on migration of the retinal cells into the honeycomb wells. Here, we demonstrate that majority of the inner retinal neurons migrate into the 25 µm deep wells, leaving the third-order neurons, such as amacrine and ganglion cells, outside. This enables selective stimulation of the second-order neurons inside the wells, thus preserving the intraretinal signal processing in prosthetic vision. Comparable glial response to that with flat implants suggests that migration and separation of the retinal cells by the walls does not cause additional stress. Furthermore, retinal migration into the honeycombs does not negatively affect its electrical excitability, while grating acuity matches the pixel pitch down to 40 µm and reaches the 27 µm limit of natural resolution in rats with 20 µm pixels. These findings pave the way for 3-D subretinal prostheses with pixel sizes of cellular dimensions.
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Poríferos , Neuronas Retinianas , Prótesis Visuales , Humanos , Ratas , Animales , Implantación de Prótesis , Retina/fisiología , Visión Ocular , Estimulación EléctricaRESUMEN
Neurons undergo nanometer-scale deformations during action potentials, and the underlying mechanism has been actively debated for decades. Previous observations were limited to a single spot or the cell boundary, while movement across the entire neuron during the action potential remained unclear. Here we report full-field imaging of cellular deformations accompanying the action potential in mammalian neuron somas (-1.8 to 1.4 nm) and neurites (-0.7 to 0.9 nm), using high-speed quantitative phase imaging with a temporal resolution of 0.1 ms and an optical path length sensitivity of <4 pm per pixel. The spike-triggered average, synchronized to electrical recording, demonstrates that the time course of the optical phase changes closely matches the dynamics of the electrical signal. Utilizing the spatial and temporal correlations of the phase signals across the cell, we enhance the detection and segmentation of spiking cells compared to the shot-noise-limited performance of single pixels. Using three-dimensional (3D) cellular morphology extracted via confocal microscopy, we demonstrate that the voltage-dependent changes in the membrane tension induced by ionic repulsion can explain the magnitude, time course, and spatial features of the phase imaging. Our full-field observations of the spike-induced deformations shed light upon the electromechanical coupling mechanism in electrogenic cells and open the door to noninvasive label-free imaging of neural signaling.
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Potenciales de Acción , Membrana Celular/fisiología , Interferometría/métodos , Neuronas/citología , Neuronas/fisiología , Animales , Imagen Molecular , OptogenéticaRESUMEN
PURPOSE: Macular telangiectasia (MacTel) Type 2 is a progressing neurovascular disease of the macula, currently lacking effective treatment. This study assessed the effect of nondamaging retinal laser therapy (NRT) compared with sham. METHODS: Twelve MacTel patients were enrolled in this double-masked, controlled, randomized clinical trial. For the nine patients with both eyes eligible, one eye was randomized to NRT or sham and the other received alternate treatment. For three patients with only one eye eligible, that eye was randomly assigned either NRT or sham. Ellipsoid zone disruption, best-corrected visual acuity, and macular automated perimetry at 12 months served as structural and functional measures. RESULTS: Eleven eyes were randomized to sham and 10 to NRT. Baseline best-corrected visual acuity was 66 letters (20/50) for sham and 72 letters (20/40) for NRT (P = 0.245). Ellipsoid zone disruption area was 298 µm2 in sham and 368 µm2 in NRT (P = 0.391). At 12 months, ellipsoid zone disruption increased by 24% in sham and decreased by 34% in NRT (P < 0.001). Best-corrected visual acuity measures remained stable during follow-up compared with baseline. At 1 year, the mean macular sensitivity was 28 dB in the NRT group, compared with 26 dB in sham. CONCLUSION: Nondamaging retinal laser therapy was safe and well tolerated in patients with MacTel and resulted in structural and functional improvements, which could represent a protective effect of laser-induced hyperthermia. Longer follow-up and larger number of patients should help corroborate these effects.
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Angiografía con Fluoresceína/métodos , Terapia por Láser/métodos , Mácula Lútea/diagnóstico por imagen , Telangiectasia Retiniana/cirugía , Tomografía de Coherencia Óptica/métodos , Agudeza Visual , Anciano , Progresión de la Enfermedad , Método Doble Ciego , Femenino , Estudios de Seguimiento , Humanos , Mácula Lútea/cirugía , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Telangiectasia Retiniana/diagnóstico por imagen , Telangiectasia Retiniana/fisiopatología , Resultado del TratamientoRESUMEN
Optical phase changes induced by transient perturbations provide a sensitive measure of material properties. We demonstrate the high sensitivity and speed of such methods, using two interferometric techniques: quantitative phase imaging (QPI) in transmission and phase-resolved optical coherence tomography (OCT) in reflection. Shot-noise-limited QPI can resolve energy deposition of about 3.4 mJ/cm2 in a single pulse, which corresponds to 0.8 °C temperature rise in a single cell. OCT can detect deposition of 24 mJ/cm2 energy between two scattering interfaces producing signals with about 30-dB signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and 4.7 mJ/cm2 when SNR is 45 dB. Both techniques can image thermal changes within the thermal confinement time, which enables accurate single-shot mapping of absorption coefficients even in highly scattering samples, as well as electrical conductivity and many other material properties in biological samples at cellular scale. Integration of the phase changes along the beam path helps increase sensitivity, and the signal relaxation time reveals the size of hidden objects. These methods may enable multiple applications, ranging from temperature-controlled retinal laser therapy or gene expression to mapping electric current density and characterization of semiconductor devices with rapid pump-probe measurements.
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Interferometría/métodos , Retina/química , Tomografía de Coherencia Óptica/métodos , Animales , Rayos Láser , Ratas , Ratas Long-Evans , Retina/diagnóstico por imagen , Epitelio Pigmentado de la Retina/química , Epitelio Pigmentado de la Retina/diagnóstico por imagen , Relación Señal-RuidoRESUMEN
PURPOSE: Loss of photoreceptors in atrophic age-related macular degeneration results in severe visual impairment, although some peripheral vision is retained. To restore central vision without compromising the residual peripheral field, we developed a wireless photovoltaic retinal implant (PRIMA; Pixium Vision, Paris, France) in which pixels convert images projected from video glasses using near-infrared light into electric current to stimulate the nearby inner retinal neurons. DESIGN: We carried out a first-in-human clinical trial to test the safety and efficacy of the prosthesis in patients with geographic atrophy (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier, NCT03333954). PARTICIPANTS: Five patients with geographic atrophy zone of at least 3 optic disc diameters, no foveal light perception, and best-corrected visual acuity of 20/400 to 20/1000 in the worse-seeing study eye. METHODS: The 2-mm wide, 30-µm thick chip, containing 378 pixels (each 100 µm in diameter), was implanted subretinally in the area of atrophy (absolute scotoma). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Anatomic outcomes were assessed with fundus photography and OCT for up to 12 months of follow-up. Prosthetic vision was assessed by mapping light perception, bar orientation, letter recognition, and Landolt C acuity. RESULTS: In all patients, the prosthesis was implanted successfully under the macula, although in 2 patients, it was implanted in unintended locations: within the choroid and off center by 2 mm. All 5 patients could perceive white-yellow prosthetic visual patterns with adjustable brightness in the previous scotomata. The 3 with optimal placement of the implant demonstrated prosthetic acuity of 20/460 to 20/550, and the patient with the off-center implant demonstrated 20/800 acuity. Residual natural acuity did not decrease after implantation in any patient. CONCLUSIONS: Implantation of the PRIMA did not decrease the residual natural acuity, and it restored visual sensitivity in the former scotoma in each of the 5 patients. In 3 patients with the proper placement of the chip, prosthetic visual acuity was only 10% to 30% less than the level expected from the pixel pitch (20/420). Therefore, the use of optical or electronic magnification in the glasses as well as smaller pixels in future implants may improve visual acuity even further.
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Electrodos Implantados , Mácula Lútea/patología , Degeneración Macular/fisiopatología , Recuperación de la Función/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Prótesis Visuales , Estudios de Factibilidad , Femenino , Humanos , Degeneración Macular/diagnóstico , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Tomografía de Coherencia ÓpticaRESUMEN
PURPOSE: To review and discuss current innovations and future implications of promising biotechnology and biomedical offerings in the field of retina. We focus on therapies that have already emerged as clinical offerings or are poised to do so. METHODS: Literature review and commentary focusing on stem cell therapies, gene-based therapies, optogenetic therapies, and retinal prosthetic devices. RESULTS: The technologies discussed herein are some of the more recent promising biotechnology and biomedical developments within the field of retina. Retinal prosthetic devices and gene-based therapies both have an FDA-approved product for ophthalmology, and many other offerings (including optogenetics) are in the pipeline. Stem cell therapies offer personalized medicine through novel regenerative mechanisms but entail complex ethical and reimbursement challenges. CONCLUSION: Stem cell therapies, gene-based therapies, optogenetics, and retinal prosthetic devices represent a new era of biotechnological and biomedical progress. These bring new ethical, regulatory, care delivery, and reimbursement challenges. By addressing these issues proactively, we may accelerate delivery of care to patients in a safe, efficient, and value-based manner.
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Predicción , Terapia Genética/métodos , Optogenética/métodos , Degeneración Retiniana/terapia , Trasplante de Células Madre/métodos , Prótesis Visuales , HumanosRESUMEN
Photovoltaic subretinal prosthesis is designed for restoration of central vision in patients with age-related macular degeneration (AMD). We investigated the utility of prosthetic central vision for complex visual tasks using augmented-reality (AR) glasses simulating reduced acuity, contrast, and visual field. AR glasses with blocked central 20° of visual field included an integrated video camera and software which adjusts the image quality according to three user-defined parameters: resolution, corresponding to the equivalent pixel size of an implant; field of view, corresponding to the implant size; and number of grayscale levels. The real-time processed video was streamed on a screen in front of the right eye. Nineteen healthy participants were recruited to complete visual tasks including vision charts, sentence reading, and face recognition. With vision charts, letter acuity exceeded the pixel-sampling limit by 0.2 logMAR. Reading speed decreased with increasing pixel size and with reduced field of view (7°-12°). In the face recognition task (four-way forced choice, 5° angular size) participants identified faces at >75% accuracy, even with 100 µm pixels and only two grayscale levels. With 60 µm pixels and eight grayscale levels, the accuracy exceeded 97%. Subjects with simulated prosthetic vision performed slightly better than the sampling limit on the letter acuity tasks, and were highly accurate at recognizing faces, even with 100 µm/pixel resolution. These results indicate feasibility of reading and face recognition using prosthetic central vision even with 100 µm pixels, and performance improves further with smaller pixels.
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Realidad Aumentada , Desempeño Psicomotor/fisiología , Trastornos de la Visión/fisiopatología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Prótesis Visuales , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Simulación por Computador , Sensibilidad de Contraste/fisiología , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Agudeza Visual/fisiología , Campos Visuales/fisiología , Adulto JovenRESUMEN
Upon degeneration of photoreceptors in the adult retina, interneurons, including bipolar cells, exhibit a plastic response leading to their aberrant rewiring. Photoreceptor reintroduction has been suggested as a potential approach to sight restoration, but the ability of deafferented bipolar cells to establish functional synapses with photoreceptors is poorly understood. Here we use photocoagulation to selectively destroy photoreceptors in adult rabbits while preserving the inner retina. We find that rods and cones shift into the ablation zone over several weeks, reducing the blind spot at scotopic and photopic luminances. During recovery, rod and cone bipolar cells exhibit markedly different responses to deafferentation. Rod bipolar cells extend their dendrites to form new synapses with healthy photoreceptors outside the lesion, thereby restoring visual function in the deafferented retina. Secretagogin-positive cone bipolar cells did not exhibit such obvious dendritic restructuring. These findings are encouraging to the idea of photoreceptor reintroduction for vision restoration in patients blinded by retinal degeneration. At the same time, they draw attention to the postsynaptic side of photoreceptor reintroduction; various bipolar cell types, representing different visual pathways, vary in their response to the photoreceptor loss and in their consequent dendritic restructuring.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Loss of photoreceptors during retinal degeneration results in permanent visual impairment. Strategies for vision restoration based on the reintroduction of photoreceptors inherently rely on the ability of the remaining retinal neurons to correctly synapse with new photoreceptors. We show that deafferented bipolar cells in the adult mammalian retina can reconnect to rods and cones and restore retinal sensitivity at scotopic and photopic luminances. Rod bipolar cells extend their dendrites to form new synapses with healthy rod photoreceptors. These findings support the idea that bipolar cells might be able to synapse with reintroduced photoreceptors, thereby restoring vision in patients blinded by retinal degeneration.
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Células Bipolares de la Retina/fisiología , Células Fotorreceptoras Retinianas Bastones/fisiología , Sinapsis/fisiología , Visión Ocular/fisiología , Animales , Dendritas/fisiología , Desnervación , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Plasticidad Neuronal , Neuronas Aferentes/fisiología , Conejos , Células Fotorreceptoras Retinianas Conos/fisiología , Vías VisualesRESUMEN
Subretinal prostheses aim at restoring sight to patients blinded by photoreceptor degeneration using electrical activation of the surviving inner retinal neurons. Today, such implants deliver visual information with low-frequency stimulation, resulting in discontinuous visual percepts. We measured retinal responses to complex visual stimuli delivered at video rate via a photovoltaic subretinal implant and by visible light. Using a multielectrode array to record from retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) in the healthy and degenerated rat retina ex vivo, we estimated their spatiotemporal properties from the spike-triggered average responses to photovoltaic binary white noise stimulus with 70-µm pixel size at 20-Hz frame rate. The average photovoltaic receptive field size was 194 ± 3 µm (mean ± SE), similar to that of visual responses (221 ± 4 µm), but response latency was significantly shorter with photovoltaic stimulation. Both visual and photovoltaic receptive fields had an opposing center-surround structure. In the healthy retina, ON RGCs had photovoltaic OFF responses, and vice versa. This reversal is consistent with depolarization of photoreceptors by electrical pulses, as opposed to their hyperpolarization under increasing light, although alternative mechanisms cannot be excluded. In degenerate retina, both ON and OFF photovoltaic responses were observed, but in the absence of visual responses, it is not clear what functional RGC types they correspond to. Degenerate retina maintained the antagonistic center-surround organization of receptive fields. These fast and spatially localized network-mediated ON and OFF responses to subretinal stimulation via photovoltaic pixels with local return electrodes raise confidence in the possibility of providing more functional prosthetic vision. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Retinal prostheses currently in clinical use have struggled to deliver visual information at naturalistic frequencies, resulting in discontinuous percepts. We demonstrate modulation of the retinal ganglion cells (RGC) activity using complex spatiotemporal stimuli delivered via subretinal photovoltaic implant at 20 Hz in healthy and in degenerate retina. RGCs exhibit fast and localized ON and OFF network-mediated responses, with antagonistic center-surround organization of their receptive fields.
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Células Ganglionares de la Retina/fisiología , Prótesis Visuales , Potenciales de Acción , Animales , Ratas , Ratas Long-EvansRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Electrical vasoconstriction is a promising approach to control blood pressure or restrict bleeding in non-compressible wounds. We explore the neural and non-neural pathways of electrical vasoconstriction in-vivo. METHODS: Charge-balanced, asymmetric pulses were delivered through a pair of metal disc electrodes. Vasoconstriction was assessed by measuring the diameter of rat saphenous vessels stimulated with low-voltage (20 V, 1 ms) and high-voltage (150 V, 10 µs) stimuli at 10 Hz for 5 min. Activation pathways were explored by topical application of a specific neural agonist (phenylephrine, alpha-1 receptor), a non-specific agonist (KCl) and neural inhibitors (phenoxybenzamine, 25 mg/ml; guanethidine, 1 mg/ml). Acute tissue damage was assessed with a membrane permeability (live-dead) fluorescent assay. The Joule heating in tissue was estimated using COMSOL Multiphysics modeling. RESULTS: During stimulation, arteries constricted to 41 ± 8% and 37 ± 6% of their pre-stimulus diameter with low- and high-voltage stimuli, while veins constricted to 80 ± 18% and 40 ± 11%, respectively. In arteries, despite similar extent of constriction, the recovery time was very different: about 30 s for low-voltage and 10 min for high-voltage stimuli. Neural inhibitors significantly reduced low-voltage arterial constriction, but did not affect high-voltage arterial or venous constriction, indicating that high-voltage stimuli activate non-neural vasoconstriction pathways. Adrenergic pathways predominantly controlled low-voltage arterial but not venous constriction, which may involve a purinergic pathway. Viability staining confirmed that stimuli were below the electroporation threshold. Modeling indicates that heating of the blood vessels during stimulation (< 0.2 °C) is too low to cause vasoconstriction. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that low-voltage stimuli induce reversible vasoconstriction through neural pathways, while high-voltage stimuli activate non-neural pathways, likely in addition to neural stimulation. Different stimuli providing precise control over the extent of arterial and venous constriction as well as relaxation rate could be used to control bleeding, perfusion or blood pressure.
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Estimulación Eléctrica , Vasoconstricción/fisiología , Animales , Masculino , Ratas , Ratas Long-Evans , Vena SafenaRESUMEN
PURPOSE: To summarize the literature addressing subthreshold or nondamaging retinal laser therapy (NRT) for central serous chorioretinopathy (CSCR) and to discuss results and trends that provoke further investigation. METHODS: Analysis of current literature evaluating NRT with micropulse or continuous wave lasers for CSCR. RESULTS: Sixteen studies including 398 patients consisted of retrospective case series, prospective nonrandomized interventional case series, and prospective randomized clinical trials. All studies but one evaluated chronic CSCR, and laser parameters varied greatly between studies. Mean central macular thickness decreased, on average, by â¼80 µm by 3 months. Mean best-corrected visual acuity increased, on average, by about 9 letters by 3 months, and no study reported a decrease in acuity below presentation. No retinal complications were observed with the various forms of NRT used, but six patients in two studies with micropulse laser experienced pigmentary changes in the retinal pigment epithelium attributed to excessive laser settings. CONCLUSION: Based on the current evidence, NRT demonstrates efficacy and safety in 12-month follow-up in patients with chronic and possibly acute CSCR. The NRT would benefit from better standardization of the laser settings and understanding of mechanisms of action, as well as further prospective randomized clinical trials.
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Coriorretinopatía Serosa Central/cirugía , Terapia por Láser/métodos , Láseres de Semiconductores/uso terapéutico , Agudeza Visual , HumanosRESUMEN
PURPOSE: To assess safety and clinical efficacy of the nondamaging photothermal therapy for the macula for the treatment of chronic central serous retinopathy. METHODS: Sixteen eyes of 16 patients with persistent central serous retinopathy (>4 months of duration) were treated with the PASCAL Streamline) at 577-nm wavelength, using 200-µm retinal spot sizes. Using Endpoint Management Software, the laser power was first titrated for a barely visible burn with 15-ms pulses, which was defined as 100% pulse energy. Treatment was then applied over the area of serous retinal detachment and adjacent nonthickened retina, using 30% pulse energy with the spot spacing of 0.25 beam diameter. Changes in subretinal fluid, Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study best-corrected visual acuity, and central macular thickness were measured over 6 months of follow-up. Pretreatment and posttreatment fluorescein angiography and fundus autofluorescence were also assessed. RESULTS: On average, 532 spots have been applied per treatment. No visible laser marks could be detected by clinical observation, optical coherence tomography, fundus autofluorescence, or fluorescein angiography. On average, 12 Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study letters gain was achieved at 2 months and was sustained by 6 months (P < 0.001). Central macular thickness decreased from 350 µm to 282 µm (P = 0.004). Subretinal fluid completely resolved in 37% of the patients after first treatment, whereas 44% of the patients required retreatment after 3 months because of recurrent fluid or incomplete resolution. The remaining 19% of the patients received a second retreatment. By 6 months, in 75% of the patients, the subretinal fluid was completely resolved, whereas in 25%, there was some minimal fluid left. CONCLUSION: Photothermal therapy using 577-nm PASCAL laser with Endpoint Management graphic user interface was safe, and it improved visual acuity and resolution of subretinal fluid in chronic central serous retinopathy. Lack of tissue damage allows periodic retreatment without cumulative scaring, characteristic to conventional photocoagulation. This technique should be tested in the treatment of other macular disorders and may offer an alternative to conventional laser coagulation of the macula and to anti-vascular endothelial growth factor pharmacological treatments of macular diseases.
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Coriorretinopatía Serosa Central/cirugía , Coagulación con Láser/métodos , Coriorretinopatía Serosa Central/diagnóstico , Enfermedad Crónica , Colorantes , Femenino , Angiografía con Fluoresceína , Humanos , Verde de Indocianina , Coagulación con Láser/instrumentación , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Estudios Prospectivos , Tomografía de Coherencia Óptica , Agudeza Visual/fisiologíaRESUMEN
CNS neurons change their connectivity to accommodate a changing environment, form memories, or respond to injury. Plasticity in the adult mammalian retina after injury or disease was thought to be limited to restructuring resulting in abnormal retinal anatomy and function. Here we report that neurons in the mammalian retina change their connectivity and restore normal retinal anatomy and function after injury. Patches of photoreceptors in the rabbit retina were destroyed by selective laser photocoagulation, leaving retinal inner neurons (bipolar, amacrine, horizontal, ganglion cells) intact. Photoreceptors located outside of the damaged zone migrated to make new functional connections with deafferented bipolar cells located inside the lesion. The new connections restored ON and OFF responses in deafferented ganglion cells. This finding extends the previously perceived limits of restorative plasticity in the adult retina and allows for new approaches to retinal laser therapy free of current detrimental side effects such as scotomata and scarring.
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Rayos Láser/efectos adversos , Fotocoagulación/métodos , Recuperación de la Función/fisiología , Retina/patología , Enfermedades de la Retina/cirugía , Animales , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Estimulación Eléctrica , Ácido Glutámico/metabolismo , Técnicas In Vitro , Masculino , Técnicas de Placa-Clamp , Estimulación Luminosa , Células Fotorreceptoras/patología , Células Fotorreceptoras/ultraestructura , Conejos , Retina/metabolismo , Retina/ultraestructura , Enfermedades de la Retina/etiología , Células Ganglionares de la Retina/fisiología , Sinapsis/patología , Sinapsis/ultraestructura , Factores de Tiempo , Tomografía Computarizada por Rayos X , Visión Ocular/fisiología , Vías Visuales/patología , Vías Visuales/fisiología , Ácido gamma-Aminobutírico/metabolismoRESUMEN
Photovoltaic arrays (PVA) implanted into the subretinal space of patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) are designed to electrically stimulate the remaining inner retinal circuitry in response to incident light, thereby recreating a visual signal when photoreceptor function declines or is lost. Preservation of inner retinal circuitry is critical to the fidelity of this transmitted signal to ganglion cells and beyond to higher visual targets. Post-implantation loss of retinal interneurons or excessive glial scarring could diminish and/or eliminate PVA-evoked signal transmission. As such, assessing the morphology of the inner retina in RP animal models with subretinal PVAs is an important step in defining biocompatibility and predicting success of signal transmission. In this study, we used immunohistochemical methods to qualitatively and quantitatively compare inner retinal morphology after the implantation of a PVA in two RP models: the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) or transgenic S334ter-line 3 (S334ter-3) rhodopsin mutant rat. Two PVA designs were compared. In the RCS rat, we implanted devices in the subretinal space at 4 weeks of age and histologically examined them at 8 weeks of age and found inner retinal morphology preservation with both PVA devices. In the S334ter-3 rat, we implanted devices at 6-12 weeks of age and again, inner retinal morphology was generally preserved with either PVA design 16-26 weeks post-implantation. Specifically, the length of rod bipolar cells and numbers of cholinergic amacrine cells were maintained along with their characteristic inner plexiform lamination patterns. Throughout the implanted retinas we found nonspecific glial reaction, but none showed additional glial scarring at the implant site. Our results indicate that subretinally implanted PVAs are well-tolerated in rodent RP models and that the inner retinal circuitry is preserved, consistent with our published results showing implant-evoked signal transmission.
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Células Amacrinas/citología , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Células Ependimogliales/citología , Células Bipolares de la Retina/citología , Retinitis Pigmentosa/cirugía , Visión Ocular/fisiología , Prótesis Visuales , Células Amacrinas/fisiología , Animales , Biomarcadores/metabolismo , Electrorretinografía , Células Ependimogliales/fisiología , Técnica del Anticuerpo Fluorescente Indirecta , Proteína Ácida Fibrilar de la Glía/metabolismo , Implantación de Prótesis , Proteína Quinasa C-alfa/metabolismo , Ratas , Ratas Mutantes , Ratas Transgénicas , Células Bipolares de la Retina/fisiología , Retinitis Pigmentosa/metabolismo , Retinitis Pigmentosa/patología , Agudeza Visual/fisiologíaRESUMEN
PURPOSE: Laser therapy for diabetic macular edema and other retinal diseases has been used within a wide range of laser settings: from intense burns to nondamaging exposures. However, there has been no algorithm for laser dosimetry that could determine laser parameters yielding a predictable extent of tissue damage. This multimodal imaging and structural correlation study aimed to verify and calibrate a computational model-based titration algorithm for predictable laser dosimetry ranging from nondamaging to intense coagulative tissue effects. METHODS: Endpoint Management, an algorithm based on a computational model of retinal photothermal damage, was used to set laser parameters for various levels of tissue effect. The algorithm adjusts both power and pulse duration to vary the expected level of thermal damage at different percentages of a reference titration energy dose. Experimental verification was conducted in Dutch Belted rabbits using a PASCAL Streamline 577 laser system. Titration was performed by adjusting laser power to produce a barely visible lesion at 20 ms pulse duration, which is defined as the nominal (100%) energy level. Tissue effects were then determined for energy levels of 170, 120, 100, 75, 50, and 30% of the nominal energy at 1 hour and 3, 7, 30, and 60 days after treatment. In vivo imaging included fundus autofluorescence, fluorescein angiography, and spectral-domain optical coherence tomography. Morphologic changes in tissue were analyzed using light microscopy, as well as scanning and transmission electron microscopy. RESULTS: One hundred and seventy percent and 120% levels corresponded to moderate and light burns, respectively, with damage to retinal pigment epithelium, photoreceptors, and at highest settings, to the inner retina. 50% to 75% lesions were typically subvisible ophthalmoscopically but detectable with fluorescein angiography and optical coherence tomography. Histology in these lesions demonstrated some selective damage to retinal pigment epithelium and photoreceptors. The 30% to 50% lesions were invisible with in vivo multimodal imaging, and damage was limited primarily to retinal pigment epithelium, visible best with scanning electron microscopy. Over time, photoreceptors shifted into the coagulated zone, reestablishing normal retinal anatomy in lesions ≤100%, as seen in optical coherence tomography and light microscopy. Transmission electron microscopy at 2 months demonstrated restoration of synapses between shifted-in photoreceptors and bipolar cells in these lesions. Retinal pigment epithelium monolayer restored its continuity after 1 week in all lesions. No damage could be seen <30% level. CONCLUSION: A retinal laser dosimetry protocol based on the Endpoint Management algorithm provides reproducible changes in retinal morphology in animals with various levels of pigmentation. This algorithm opens doors to clinical trials of well-defined subvisible and nondestructive regimes of retinal therapy, especially important for treatment of macular disorders.
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Algoritmos , Simulación por Computador , Coagulación con Láser/efectos adversos , Retina/lesiones , Heridas y Lesiones/prevención & control , Animales , Angiografía con Fluoresceína , Microscopía Electrónica de Rastreo , Imagen Multimodal , Conejos , Retina/ultraestructura , Tomografía de Coherencia Óptica , Heridas y Lesiones/diagnósticoRESUMEN
Modeling of Multi-Electrode Arrays used in neural stimulation can be computationally challenging since it may involve incredibly dense circuits with millions of interconnected resistors, representing current pathways in an electrolyte (resistance matrix), coupled to nonlinear circuits of the stimulating pixels themselves. Here, we present a method for accelerating the modeling of such circuits while minimizing the error of a simplified simulation by using a sparse plus low-rank approximation of the resistance matrix. Specifically, we prove that thresholding of the resistance matrix elements enables its sparsification with minimized error. This is accomplished with a sorting algorithm implying efficient O (N log (N)) complexity. The eigenvalue-based low-rank compensation then helps achieve greater accuracy without adding significantly to the problem size. Utilizing these matrix techniques, we accelerated the simulation of multi-electrode arrays by an order of magnitude, reducing the computation time by about 10-fold, while maintaining an average error of less than 0.3% in the current injected from each electrode. We also show a case where acceleration reaches at least 133 times with additional error in the range of 4%, demonstrating the ability of this algorithm to perform under extreme conditions. Although the techniques presented here are used for simulations of photovoltaic retinal prostheses, they are also immediately applicable to any circuit involving dense connections between nodes, and, with modifications, more generally to any systems involving non-sparse matrices. This approach promises significant improvements in the efficiency of modeling the next-generation retinal implants having thousands of pixels, enabling iterative design with broad applicability.
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Objective: To assess the efficacy and safety of the PRIMA neurostimulation system with a subretinal microchip for improving visual acuity (VA) in patients with geographic atrophy (GA) due to age-related macular degeneration (AMD) at 48-months postimplantation. Design: Feasibility clinical trial of the PRIMA subretinal prosthesis in patients with atrophic AMD, measuring best-corrected ETDRS VA (Clinicaltrials.govNCT03333954). Subjects: Five patients with GA, no foveal light perception, and VA of logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR) 1.3 to 1.7 (20/400-20/1000) in their worse-seeing "study" eye. Methods: In patients subretinally implanted with a photovoltaic neurostimulation array containing 378 pixels of 100 µm in size, the VA was measured with and without the PRIMA system using ETDRS charts at 1 m. The system's external components, augmented reality glasses, and pocket computer provide image processing capabilities, including zoom. Main Outcome Measures: Visual acuity using ETDRS charts with and without the system, as well as light sensitivity in the central visual field, measured by Octopus perimetry. Anatomical outcomes demonstrated by fundus photography and OCT up to 48 months postimplantation. Results: All 5 subjects met the primary end point of light perception elicited by the implant in the scotoma area. In 1 patient, the implant was incorrectly inserted into the choroid. One subject died 18 months postimplantation due to study-unrelated reasons. ETDRS VA results for the remaining 3 subjects are reported here. Without zoom, VA closely matched the pixel size of the implant: 1.17 ± 0.13 pixels, corresponding to a mean logMAR of 1.39, or Snellen of 20/500, ranging from 20/438 to 20/565. Using zoom at 48 months, subjects improved their VA by 32 ETDRS letters versus baseline (standard error 5.1) 95% confidence intervals (13.4, 49.9; P < 0.0001). Natural peripheral visual function in the treated eye did not decline after surgery or during the 48-month follow-up period (P = 0.08). Conclusions: Subretinal implantation of PRIMA in subjects with GA experiencing profound vision loss due to AMD is feasible and well tolerated, with no reduction of natural peripheral vision up to 48 months. Prosthetic central vision provided by photovoltaic neurostimulation enabled patients to reliably recognize letters and sequences of letters, and with zoom, it improved VA of up to 8 ETDRS lines. Financial Disclosures: Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found in the Footnotes and Disclosures at the end of this article.
RESUMEN
Phototransduction involves changes in concentration of ions and other solutes within photoreceptors and in subretinal space, which affect osmotic pressure and the associated water flow. Corresponding expansion and contraction of cellular layers can be imaged using optoretinography (ORG), based on phase-resolved optical coherence tomography (OCT). Until now, ORG could reliably detect only photoisomerization and phototransduction in photoreceptors, primarily in cones under bright stimuli. Here, by employing a phase-restoring subpixel motion correction algorithm, which enables imaging of the nanometer-scale tissue dynamics during minute-long recordings, and unsupervised learning of spatiotemporal patterns, we discover optical signatures of the other retinal structures' response to visual stimuli. These include inner and outer segments of rod photoreceptors, retinal pigment epithelium, and subretinal space in general. The high sensitivity of our technique enables detection of the retinal responses to dim stimuli: down to 0.01% bleach level, corresponding to natural levels of scotopic illumination. We also demonstrate that with a single flash, the optoretinogram can map retinal responses across a 12° field of view, potentially replacing multifocal electroretinography. This technique expands the diagnostic capabilities and practical applicability of optoretinography, providing an alternative to electroretinography, while combining structural and functional retinal imaging in the same OCT machine.