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A Burst of Technology, Helping the Blind to See

By PAM BELLUCK
Posted: September 26, 2009.

Print: New York Times

excerpt from article:

The approaches include gene therapy, which has produced improved vision in people who are blind from one rare congenital disease. Stem cell research is considered promising, although far from producing results, and other studies involve a light-responding protein and retinal transplants.

Others are implanting electrodes in monkeys’ brains to see if directly stimulating visual areas might allow even people with no eye function to see.

And recently, Sharron Kay Thornton, 60, from Smithdale, Miss., blinded by a skin condition, regained sight in one eye after doctors at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine extracted a tooth (her eyetooth, actually), shaved it down and used it as a base for a plastic lens replacing her cornea.

Other techniques focus on delaying blindness, including one involving a capsule implanted in the eye to release proteins that slow the decay of light-responding cells. And with BrainPort, a camera worn by a blind person captures images and transmits signals to electrodes slipped onto the tongue, causing tingling sensations that a person can learn to decipher as the location and movement of objects.

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Comments (2)

I found this bit to be ironic: “Linda Morfoot, 65, of Long Beach, Calif., blind for 12 years, says she can now toss a ball into a basketball hoop, follow her nine grandchildren as they run around her living room and ‘see where the preacher is’ in church.”

posted on September 26, 2009
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It’s such a pleasure to encounter technology that is breathtaking and moving at the same time.  Reading this article made the hair on my arms stand up.  Sure beats a religious experience in my book.

posted on September 27, 2009
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