can we rally hear the light?
University of Utah researchers used invisible infrared light to make rat heart cells contract and toadfish inner-ear cells send signals to the brain. The discovery someday might improve cochlear implants for deafness and lead to devices to restore vision, maintain balance and treat movement disorders like Parkinson's.
"We're going to talk to the brain with optical infrared pulses instead of electrical pulses," which now are used in cochlear implants to provide deaf people with limited hearing, says Richard Rabbitt, a professor of bioengineering and senior author of the heart-cell and inner-ear-cell studies published this month in The Journal of Physiology
The studies � funded by the National Institutes of Health � also raise the possibility of developing cardiac pacemakers that use optical signals rather than electrical signals to stimulate heart cells. But Rabbitt says that because electronic pacemakers work well, "I don't see a market for an optical pacemaker at the present time".
The scientific significance of the studies is the discovery that optical signals � short pulses of an invisible wavelength of infrared laser light delivered via a thin, glass optical fiber � can activate heart cells and inner-ear cells correlation to balance and hearing.........
"We're going to talk to the brain with optical infrared pulses instead of electrical pulses," which now are used in cochlear implants to provide deaf people with limited hearing, says Richard Rabbitt, a professor of bioengineering and senior author of the heart-cell and inner-ear-cell studies published this month in The Journal of Physiology
The studies � funded by the National Institutes of Health � also raise the possibility of developing cardiac pacemakers that use optical signals rather than electrical signals to stimulate heart cells. But Rabbitt says that because electronic pacemakers work well, "I don't see a market for an optical pacemaker at the present time".
The scientific significance of the studies is the discovery that optical signals � short pulses of an invisible wavelength of infrared laser light delivered via a thin, glass optical fiber � can activate heart cells and inner-ear cells correlation to balance and hearing.........
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