The chip that restores vision to people with irreversible blindness
The chip that restores vision to people with irreversible blindness


A tiny, wire-free implant positioned behind the retina has given some reading back to people living on the brink of irreversible blindness caused by macular degeneration. The international clinical trial led by Stanford Medicine showed a result that is difficult to ignore, of 32 patients, 27 returned to reading after a year of use.
The prosthesis replaces our natural vision, introducing a technically precise alternative route that allows us to recover functions previously considered permanently lost. The Science Corporation, responsible for the commercial adaptation, foresees the arrival of the Prima on the European market in 2026; The new generation of the chip expands the field of view and increases resolution, bringing the experience closer to face recognition and finer details.
