학술논문

An In Vitro Model of a Retinal Prosthesis
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering IEEE Trans. Biomed. Eng. Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on. 55(6):1744-1753 Jun, 2008
Subject
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
In vitro
Retina
Electrodes
Prosthetics
Neural prosthesis
Degenerative diseases
Blindness
Implants
Photoreceptors
Brightness
Microelectrodes arrays
retinal electrophysiology
retinal prosthesis
Language
ISSN
0018-9294
1558-2531
Abstract
Epiretinal prostheses are being developed to bypass a degenerated photoreceptor layer and excite surviving ganglion and inner retinal cells. We used custom microfabricated multielectrode arrays with 200- $\mu$m-diameter stimulating electrodes and 10- $\mu$m-diameter recording electrodes to stimulate and record neural responses in isolated tiger salamander retina. Pharmacological agents were used to isolate direct excitation of ganglion cells from excitation of other inner retinal cells. Strength-duration data suggest that, if amplitude will be used for the coding of brightness or gray level in retinal prostheses, shorter pulses (200 $\mu$s) will allow for a smaller region in the area of the electrode to be excited over a larger dynamic range compared with longer pulses (1 ms). Both electrophysiological results and electrostatic finite-element modeling show that electrode–electrode interactions can lead to increased thresholds for sites half way between simultaneously stimulated electrodes (29.4 ± 6.6 nC) compared with monopolar stimulation (13.3 ± 1.7 nC, $p$ ≪ 0.02). Presynaptic stimulation of the same ganglion cell with both 200- and 10- $\mu$ m-diameter electrodes yielded threshold charge densities of 12 ± 6 and 7.66 ± 1.30 nC/cm$^2$ , respectively, while the required charge was 12.5 ± 6.2 and 19 ± 3.3 nC.