4.6 Article

Tickling the retina: integration of subthreshold electrical pulses can activate retinal neurons

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1741-2560/13/4/046004

Keywords

systems biology; retinal prosthesis; white noise analysis; spike triggered average

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [031 A 308]
  2. BMBF [FKZ: 01GQ1002]
  3. Deutsche Ophthalmologische Gesellschaft
  4. PRO RETINA foundation for prevention of blindness
  5. Tistou and Charlotte Kerstan Foundation
  6. Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience (CIN) at the Eberhard Karls University of Tubingen
  7. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) within the framework of the Excellence Initiative [EXC 307]

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Objective. The field of retinal prosthetics has made major progress over the last decade, restoring visual percepts to people suffering from retinitis pigmentosa. The stimulation pulses used by present implants are suprathreshold, meaning individual pulses are designed to activate the retina. In this paper we explore subthreshold pulse sequences as an alternate stimulation paradigm. Subthreshold pulses have the potential to address important open problems such as fading of visual percepts when patients are stimulated at moderate pulse repetition rates and the difficulty in preferentially stimulating different retinal pathways. Approach. As a first step in addressing these issues we used Gaussian white noise electrical stimulation combined with spike-triggered averaging to interrogate whether a subthreshold sequence of pulses can be used to activate the mouse retina. Main results. We demonstrate that the retinal network can integrate multiple subthreshold electrical stimuli under an experimental paradigm immediately relevant to retinal prostheses. Furthermore, these characteristic stimulus sequences varied in their shape and integration window length across the population of retinal ganglion cells. Significance. Because the subthreshold sequences activate the retina at stimulation rates that would typically induce strong fading (25 Hz), such retinal 'tickling' has the potential to minimize the fading problem. Furthermore, the diversity found across the cell population in characteristic pulse sequences suggests that these sequences could be used to selectively address the different retinal pathways (e.g. ON versus OFF). Both of these outcomes may significantly improve visual perception in retinal implant patients.

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