Researchers have suggested that cells taken from the donated eyes of dead people may be able to give sight to the blind.
Tests in rats showed that the human cells can restore some vision to completely blind rats.
The team at University College London said similar results in humans would improve quality of life, but would not give enough vision to read.
The team extracted a special kind of cell from the back of the eye. These Muller glia cells – a type of adult stem cell – is capable of transforming into the specialized cells in the back of the eye and could be useful for treating a wide range of sight
disorders.
In the lab, the cells were transformed into rod cells that detected light in the retina, and injecting the rods into the backs of the eyes of completely blind rats partially restored their vision.
Brain scans showed that 50 percent of the electrical signals between the eye and the brain made a recovery after the treatment.
The study has been published in journal Stem Cells Translational Medicine.
Source: Zee News