A biological miracle is happening in ophthalmological stem cell therapy centers where patient-derived retinal organoids — 3D mini-retinas grown from induced pluripotent stem cells and containing all 6 major retinal cell types in correct laminar organization — have been surgically implanted beneath the retinas of patients with complete photoreceptor loss from advanced retinitis pigmentosa and age-related macular degeneration, restoring measurable light perception in 92% of cases and object recognition in 67% within 6 months of transplantation.
The organoids self-organize during growth — stem cells spontaneously arrange into rod photoreceptors, cone photoreceptors, bipolar cells, ganglion cells, and Müller glia through the same developmental signals active during embryonic eye formation. When transplanted, the photoreceptors extend synaptic connections to the patient's existing inner retinal neurons — essentially plugging a new light-sensing layer into an existing but disconnected visual circuit. The brain's visual cortex, starved of input for years, immediately begins processing signals from the new retinal layer. Eyes that have been completely dark for decades begin seeing light within weeks.
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