Skip to content
  • Happy Health
  • Happy Mindset
  • Animal Wonders
  • About Us
    • Team
  • Subscribe
Menu
  • Happy Health
  • Happy Mindset
  • Animal Wonders
  • About Us
    • Team
  • Subscribe
Happy News

Blind Patients Are Reading Again Thanks To This Tech

For people who have lost their central vision to eye disease, the inability to read is often one of the most devastating parts of the experience, taking away everything from books and labels to phone numbers and handwritten notes in an instant. But a tiny wireless chip smaller than a pencil eraser may be about to change all of that for good. In a landmark clinical trial published in the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers tested a device called the PRIMA implant in 38 older adults who had lost central vision to age-related macular degeneration, one of the most common causes of permanent blindness in people over 60. The chip, just two millimeters wide, is surgically placed beneath the retina where it acts as an electronic replacement for the light-sensing cells that the disease has quietly and irreversibly destroyed over time.

Patients also wear a pair of specialized glasses fitted with a small camera that wirelessly transmits images directly to the implant using near-infrared light, allowing the entire system to operate without a single wire or external connection inside the eye itself. After one year, participants gained an average of five full lines on a standard eye chart, and 27 of them were actively using their restored central vision at home to read numbers and short words in their daily lives. While the device does not restore full natural sight and currently only functions when the glasses are being worn, the results mark a stunning step forward for millions of people who had accepted permanent vision loss as an unchangeable part of their future. The company behind the implant is now seeking approval in Europe and working closely with the FDA to explore bringing this life-changing technology to patients in the United States as well.

Source: https://www.earth.com/news/wireless-eye-implant-helps-blind-patients-read-again/

PrevPreviousEvery Major Las Vegas Casino Just Made History For Its Workers
NextTurns Out We Were Wrong About When Humans Invented WritingNext

Recent Articles

Happy News

A Gamer Just Broke A 14-Year-Old Record By Playing Super Mario For 60 Hours Straight

April 29, 2026

A Japanese gamer named Audrey Mina has officially broken the Guinness World Record for the longest marathon playing games in the Super Mario series, sitting at her gaming desk in Chiyoda, Tokyo and playing from May 2 to May 5 of last year for a total of 60 hours, 17

Read More
Happy News

Medical Marijuana Got A Major Federal Upgrade

April 28, 2026

For the first time in more than 50 years, the federal government has fundamentally changed how it classifies medical marijuana, and for millions of patients and researchers, this is a very big deal. Effective April 28, 2026, the Justice Department and the Drug Enforcement Administration officially moved FDA-approved cannabis products

Read More
Happy News

A Pill That Costs Pennies And Has Been Around For 125 Years May Also Fight Cancer

April 28, 2026

A pill that has been sitting in medicine cabinets for more than a century is showing signs of being far more powerful than anyone originally imagined, as a growing body of clinical evidence points to aspirin as a meaningful weapon against cancer. Researchers at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden tracked

Read More
« Previous Next »
  • Privacy Notice
  • Accessibility Notice
  • Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information
  • Unsubscribe
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Privacy Notice
  • Accessibility Notice
  • Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information
  • Unsubscribe
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2026 HappyNews.