4.8 Article

Electrical stimulation of retinal ganglion cells with diamond and the development of an all diamond retinal prosthesis

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 33, Issue 24, Pages 5812-5820

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2012.04.063

Keywords

Bionic; Retina; Diamond; Neural stimulation

Funding

  1. Australian Government
  2. Digital Economy and the Australian Research Council
  3. Victorian Government
  4. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [585440]
  5. Australian Research Council (ARC) through its Special Research Initiative (SRI) in Bionic Vision Science and Technology grant

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Electronic retinal implants for the blind are already a market reality. A world wide effort is underway to find the technology that offers the best combination of performance and safety for potential patients. Our approach is to construct an epi-retinally targeted device entirely encapsulated in diamond to maximise longevity and biocompatibility. The stimulating array of our device comprises a monolith of electrically insulating diamond with thousands of hermetic, microscale nitrogen doped ultra-nanocrystalline diamond (N-UNCD) feedthroughs. Here we seek to establish whether the conducting diamond feedthroughs of the array can be used as stimulating electrodes without further modification with a more traditional neural stimulation material. Efficacious stimulation of retinal ganglion cells was established using single N-UNCD microelectrodes in contact with perfused, explanted, rat retina. Evoked rat retinal ganglion cell action potentials were recorded by patch clamp recording from single ganglion cells, adjacent to the N-UNCD stimulating electrode. Separately, excellent electrochemical stability of N-UNCD was established by prolonged pulsing in phosphate buffered saline at increasing charge density up to the measured charge injection limit for the material. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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