[Home-on-the-range] exciting news about Raymond Graber

Cindy Ray cindyray at gmail.com
Fri Oct 21 12:56:32 UTC 2016


I think it is so neat that he has this opportunity at the age of 88. I guess
I should forward that message to Chuck if I didn't delete it.

Cindy

 

 

From: Home-on-the-Range [mailto:home-on-the-range-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Dianne Hemphill via Home-on-the-Range
Sent: Friday, October 21, 2016 6:50 AM
To: NFB of Kansas Internet Mailing List <home-on-the-range at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Dianne Hemphill <diannehemphill at cox.net>
Subject: Re: [Home-on-the-range] exciting news about Raymond Graber

 

.this is wonderful news and I'm sure we're all happy for the good results
that Raymond is experiencing. Though we of the federation fully believe that
life without vision or limited vision can be full and exciting, we are
certainly not against having vision.  He has always been one that takes on
new challenges and a "go getter" whether with or without vision. I'm so
happy for him. Dianne

On Oct 20, 2016, at 8:26 PM, Susan Stanzel via Home-on-the-Range wrote:





Hi Everyone,

 

Some of you will not know this man, but he brought Dick Edlund into the
Federation. Martha Kelly sent this to me.

 

Susie

 

Subject: 88-year-old man sees for the first time in more than 50 years
thanks to bionic eye | Local/State News | hutchnews.com
<http://hutchnews.com> 

 


http://www.hutchnews.com/content/tncms/live/


88-year-old man sees for the first time in more than 50 years thanks to
bionic eye


It's been more than 50 years since Raymond Graber has seen sunshine.

Less than three weeks ago, that all changed.

While Graber wasn't born blind, he saw less and less as he got older - that
is, until things went completely dark in his 30s.

Graber, 88, is the second oldest person in the nation to be fitted for the
Argus II Retinal Prosthesis System, commonly known as the bionic eye, made
by Second Sight Medical Products, which gave him his sight back.

One of the first things he saw in a room filled with doctors at the UCHealth
Eye Center in Aurora, Colorado, was his hand, and the bright sunshine when
they took him outside.

"It was just wonderful," Graber said, adding that he never thought he'd be
able to see again after going blind.

Prairie Sunset Home Activity Director Holly Henning was sitting in the room
with Graber and was able to watch him see his fingers move.

"It was really neat to be able to see what he can see," said Henning, who
saw the images displayed on a monitor. Graber is a resident at the adult
care home in Pretty Prairie.

How Graber sees is much different than someone who is not blind, as he sees
through a camera on a pair of Oakley glasses. He's able to see outlines of
objects through contrasts of black and white.

Graber said he hopes the device with help with his mobility around the home
and walking on the sidewalk outside.

He hopes to see well enough one day to be able to independently hop on the
Rcat bus to Hutchinson and get a McDonald's hamburger and ice cream cone -
but he knows this will take time.

"Come Christmas time, I'm hoping to see some Christmas trees. I used to love
Christmas trees," he said. "It sounds trivial, but when you haven't seen for
so long, it means a lot."

In the beginning

In January, Henning was listening to a segment called "Tell Me Something
Good," on the Bobby Bones Show, a radio station out of Nashville, Tennessee,
that airs locally on weekdays.

The radio personalities were saying a man recently saw his wife for the
first time in 30 years thanks to the bionic eye.

She immediately thought of Graber. In no time, the two were learning
everything they could get their hands on about the device.

According to Dan Weaver, spokesman for UCHealth, a miniature video camera on
the patient's glasses captures a scene, which is sent to a small video
processing unit, which is processed and formed into instructions that are
sent to the glasses through a cable. The instructions transmit wirelessly to
an antenna in the retinal implant. These signals then are sent to an
electrode array, which emits pulses of electricity. The pulses bypass the
patient's damaged photoreceptors, stimulating the retina's remaining cells,
which transmit the scene along the optic nerve to the brain, creating a
perception of patterns of light.

Patients learn in time to interpret these visual patterns.

They found the device was only for people with retinitis pigmentosa, or RP,
an inherited disease that causes a gradual decline in vision due to the
death of photoreceptor cells.

Graber has RP, although that diagnosis wasn't around until he was older. He
said 80 years ago doctors weren't sure what was wrong with him.

The examination

A couple months after learning about the device, Graber went through an
eight-hour exam which made sure he met the bionic eye qualifications.

Some of the criteria he had to meet were the correct length of his retina
and size of his eyeball. His retina also had to respond to some stimuli.

Graber received the device - which is in one eye - five months after being
called the "perfect candidate" by his primary surgeon, UCHealth Eye Center
ophthalmologist Scott Oliver.

Doctors observed him over an eight-day stay at the University of Colorado
Hospital, which is attached to the center. Beverly Stum, who is now retired
from Prairie Sunset Home, spent the stay with him.

Graber said he hasn't been in any pain, although part of the device was
surgically implanted in and around his eye.

The surgery, Oliver said, is very precise, and is all done under an
operating microscope, as it's dealing with "one of the most delicate tissues
in the human body."

Doctors waited a month after his eye healed, and then turned the device on.

There's a lot of work that goes into learning how the bionic eye works.

"He made it very clear that he was committed to learning how to use this new
tool," Oliver said. "He has worked with the visually impaired for much of
his life, and he had real expectations about what the device can and cannot
do.

"His enthusiasm for what the device might do for him at this stage of his
life was really over the top," Oliver said.

A learning process

Graber will be re-examined in a little less than six months to see how he's
doing and how his daily therapy, which includes a black and white magnetic
board with black and white shapes, is going.

His therapy includes scanning the board to see where an object is, and
tracing the object with his fingers to train the brain to understand what
it's seeing.

Oliver said the biggest challenge and learning curve is retraining the brain
to understand what to do with the new visual information.

Graber's surgery was the second the eye center has done. The first was late
last year.

The center hopes to perform one more surgery this year due to the success of
the others.

Their first patient, Jamie Carley, was able to see fireworks for the first
time in decades, watch the television and use it while vacuuming to avoid
colliding into furniture.

Carley has been using the system for about 10 months. She was there to give
Graber tips the day the doctors turned his device on.

Oliver looks forward to hearing what all Graber will use it for.

Graber said he sees more and more every day, because he uses it every day.

He hopes more people learn that the device is available and FDA approved in
the United States. And maybe, by the time they are his age, the device will
be perfected.

But for now, it's more than he could have dreamed for.

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