Glow-in-the-dark contact lenses can fight blindness

Press Trust of India  |  Los Angeles 

Scientists have developed glow-in-the-dark that can painlessly fight caused by

Existing treatments, though effective, are painful and invasive, involving and injections into the eyeball.

Researchers from (Caltech) in the US developed a potential treatment that could be a lot less scary and invasive, in the form of a glow-in-the-dark contact

The loss of that accompanies is the result of the damage the causes to tiny blood vessels throughout the body, including those in the eye.

That damage results in reduced blood flow to the nerve cells in the retina and their eventual death. As the progresses, the body attempts to counteract the effects of the damaged blood vessels by growing new ones within the retina.

In patients, however, these vessels tend to be badly developed and bleed into the clear fluid inside the eye, obscuring and compounding eyesight problems.

As the blood vessels bleed, they cause additional damage to the retina that the body repairs with tissue rather than new light-sensing cells. Over time, a diabetic patient's becomes blurry and patchy before fading away completely.

However, damage to the retina begins with an insufficient supply of oxygen, it should be possible to stave off further eyesight loss by reducing the retina's oxygen demands.

Until now, that has been achieved by using a to burn away the cells in the peripheral parts of the retina, so the oxygen those cells would have required can be used by the more important cells in the centre of the retina.

Another treatment requires injecting medication that reduces the growth of new blood vessels directly into the eyeball.

The lenses reduce the metabolic demands of the retina, but in a different fashion. Key to their success are the eye's rod cells, which provide in low-light conditions.

"Your rod cells, as it turns out, consume about twice as much oxygen in the dark as they do in the light," said Colin Cook, a graduate student at Caltech.

For that reason, the are designed to reduce the retina's night-time oxygen demand by giving the rod cells the faintest amount of light to look at while the wearer sleeps.

"If we turn metabolism in the retina down, we should be able to prevent some of the damage that occurs," he said.

To provide light to the retina throughout the night, the lenses borrow technology from wristwatches that have glowing markers on their faces. The illumination is provided by tiny vials filled with tritium, a radioactive form of that emits electrons as it decays.

In the dark, the pupil expands, and the faint glow from the vials can illuminate the retina.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, April 25 2018. 12:20 IST