First-ever restoration of vision achieved in mice

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Experiments conducted under the leadership of a Stanford University School of Medicine investigator have succeeded, for the first time, in restoring multiple key aspects of vision in mammals.

In experiments in mice described in a study to be published online July 11 in Nature Neuroscience, the scientists coaxed optic-nerve cables, responsible for conveying visual information from the eye to the brain, into regenerating after they had been completely severed, and found that they could retrace their former routes and re-establish connections with the appropriate parts of the brain.

That unprecedented, if partial, restoration could pave the way to future work that enables blind people to see.

The animals' condition prior to the scientists' efforts to regrow the eye-to brain-connections resembled glaucoma, the second-leading cause of blindness after cataracts. Cataracts can often be surgically removed, but there's no cure for glaucoma, said the study's senior author, Andrew Huberman, PhD, an associate professor of neurobiology. Jung-Hwan Albert Lim, a graduate student at the University of California-San Diego, is the lead author.

Glaucoma, caused by excessive pressure on the optic nerve, affects nearly 70 million people worldwide. Vision loss due to optic-nerve damage can also accrue from injuries, retinal detachment, pituitary tumors, various brain cancers and other sources.

http://medicalxpress.com/news/2016-07-visual-regenerates-neural-eye-brain.html
 
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