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Journal ArticleDOI

CMOS neurostimulation ASIC with 100 channels, scaleable output, and bidirectional radio-frequency telemetry

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TLDR
The 100-channel neurostimulation circuit comprising a complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS), application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) has been designed, constructed and tested and forms a significant milestone and an integral component of a 100-electrode neuro Stimulation system being developed by the authors.
Abstract
100-channel neurostimulation circuit comprising a complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS), application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) has been designed, constructed and tested. The ASIC forms a significant milestone and an integral component of a 100-electrode neurostimulation system being developed by the authors. The system comprises an externally worn transmitter and a body implantable stimulator. The purpose of the system is to communicate both data and power across tissue via radio-frequency (RF) telemetry such that externally programmable, constant current, charge balanced, biphasic stimuli may be delivered to neural tissue at 100 unique sites. An intrinsic reverse telemetry feature of the ASIC has been designed such that information pertaining to the device function, reconstruction of the stimulation voltage waveform, and the measurement of impedance may be obtained through noninvasive means. To compensate for the paucity of data pertaining to the stimulation thresholds necessary in evoking a physiological response, the ASIC has been designed with scaleable current output. The ASIC has been designed primarily as a treatment of degenerative disorders of the retina whereby the 100 channels are to be utilized in the delivery of a pattern of stimuli of varying intensity and or duty cycle to the surviving neural tissue of the retina. However, it is conceivable that other fields of neurostimulation such as cochlear prosthetics and functional electronic stimulation may benefit from the employment of the system.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Better speech recognition with cochlear implants.

TL;DR: The comparison of the new strategy and a standard clinical processor shows large improvements in the scores of speech reception tests for all subjects, which have important implications for the treatment of deafness and for minimal representations of speech at the auditory periphery.
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The sensations produced by electrical stimulation of the visual cortex.

TL;DR: An array of radio receivers connected to electrodes in contact with the occipital pole of the right cerebral hemisphere has been implanted into a 52‐year‐old blind patient and by giving appropriate radio signals, the patient can be caused to experience sensations of light in the left half of the visual field.
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Pattern electrical stimulation of the human retina

TL;DR: Experiments were conducted to study if electrical stimulation of the retinal surface can elicit visual sensation in individuals blind from end-stage retinitis pigmentosa (RP) or age-related macular degeneration (AMD).
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual perception elicited by electrical stimulation of retina in blind humans.

TL;DR: Evaluating the feasibility of bypassing damaged photoreceptors and electrically stimulating the remaining viable retinal layers to provide limited visual input to patients who are blind because of severe photoreceptor degeneration results in focal light perception that seems to arise from the stimulated area.
Journal ArticleDOI

Morphometric analysis of macular photoreceptors and ganglion cells in retinas with retinitis pigmentosa.

TL;DR: Current experimental attempts to restore vision in diseased retinas by simulating or replacing photoreceptors are based on the premise that ganglion cells are retained after photoreceptor death, and the findings support this assumption.
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