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The Effects of Phase Durations on the Spatial Responses of Retinal Ganglion Cells to Epi- and Sub-Retinal Electrical Stimulation

conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 12:56 authored by Wei Tong, Melanie Stamp, Maryam Hejazi, David GarrettDavid Garrett, Steven Prawer, Michael Ibbotson
Retinal prostheses have the potential to restore vision to blind patients that have retinitis pigmentosa or similar hereditary degenerative disorders, by electrically stimulating surviving retinal neurons through implanted electrode arrays. Current retinal prostheses provide limited visual acuity and one challenge is to spatially control neural activation following electrical stimulation. Most of the retinal prostheses are either epi-retinal - in front of the retinal ganglion cell layer, or sub-retinal - behind photoreceptor layer. In this study, we performed calcium imaging of ganglion cells from whole mounted retinas and compared the spread of neural activation between epi-retinal stimulation with a fiber electrode and sub-retinal stimulation with a disk electrode. We investigated the effects of phase durations on the spatial resolution of biphasic stimulation. Our results suggest that with fiber electrode epi-retinal stimulation, the axon bundles activation can lead to significant spread of stimulation, and cannot be avoided simply by changing the phase durations. However, sub-retinal stimulation with very short pulses (phase duration 0.033ms) can effectively confine the activation of retinal ganglion cells.

History

Start page

1795

End page

1800

Total pages

6

Outlet

Proceedings of the 41st Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBS 2019)

Name of conference

EMBS 2019: Biomedical engineering ranging from wellness to intensive care

Publisher

IEEE

Place published

United States

Start date

2019-07-23

End date

2019-07-27

Language

English

Copyright

© 2019 IEEE

Former Identifier

2006100284

Esploro creation date

2020-09-08

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