Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02643238

Continued Study of Artificial Vision: Evaluation of the BrainPort® System and Investigation of Visual Ambulation

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
7 (actual)
Sponsor
Akron Children's Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
10 Years – 24 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the use of an artificial vision system called Brainport system in blind patients To investigate visual, and oculomotor (eye motion) mechanisms involved in the use of the Brainport system.

Detailed description

The prevalence of blindness in the US adult population is 0.8% and ranges from about 3/10000 to 15/10000 in children. Data from world health organization show that about 500,000 children become blind each year. The annual cost of blindness to the federal government is $4 billion and the cost of a lifetime of support and unpaid taxes for a blind person is about $1 million. There is a need to restore vision for blind patients. Research on vision restoration develops fast. There are multiple types of approaches toward producing useful artificial vision. One of them directly sends images from a video camera to the visual cortex via an electrode array that is intracranially placed on the visual cortex of blind patients. Another one surgically places an electrode array beneath the retina for patients whose optic nerves are still healthy. Both of them require major surgery and have high risks, and neither is available for routine clinical application. The one that is non-invasive and easy to use is called the BrainPort® system. The BrainPort® system is manufactured by Wicab, Inc. It is commercially available and affordable to any consumer. This system is a novel, bionic, non-invasive, vision bypass system that conveys environment images from a spectacle-frame-mounted video-camera to the brain via an electro-tactile tongue array. The electro-tactile stimulation delivered by the tongue-array placed on the tongue allows users to interpret the images of objects in their camera's visual field.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEBrainPortThis system is a novel, bionic, non-invasive, vision bypass system that conveys environment images from a spectacle-frame-mounted video-camera to the brain via an electro-tactile tongue array. The electro-tactile stimulation delivered by the tongue-array placed on the tongue allows users to interpret the images of objects in their camera's visual field

Timeline

Start date
2011-10-01
Primary completion
2016-12-01
Completion
2022-05-01
First posted
2015-12-31
Last updated
2022-11-16

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02643238. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.