Aculight wins yet another medical-laser SBIR

March 1, 2008
BOTHELL, WA—On the heels of its October 2007 $750,000 Phase II Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) award from the National Institutes of Health for a joint effort with Northwestern University (Evanston, IL) to develop an optical cochlear implant (OCI), laser technologies developer Aculight Corporation was awarded a new SBIR contract

BOTHELL, WA—On the heels of its October 2007 $750,000 Phase II Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) award from the National Institutes of Health for a joint effort with Northwestern University (Evanston, IL) to develop an optical cochlear implant (OCI), laser technologies developer Aculight Corporation was awarded a new SBIR contract—an $850,000 two-phase fast-track award from the National Institutes of Health that will fund a joint effort with the University of Washington (Seattle, WA) to develop a laser-based vestibular implant.

“Balance disorders such as vertigo and dizziness are among the most common reasons that elderly Americans seek heath care,” said Mark Bendett, Aculight’s director of medical products. “We’re laying the foundation for an optical implant that could treat patients with balance and vision impairments due to vestibular system damage. This SBIR will enable Aculight to produce a laser-based nerve stimulation device that can be used in research studies at the University of Washington prior to developing a model for clinical applications.”

The vestibular system is located within the inner ear. It is the body’s balance system and sends signals to the muscles that keep us upright and to the neural structures that control our eye movements. Balance and vision impairments occur when the vestibular hair cells become damaged, prohibiting the transmission of sensory signals to the brain. According to Aculight, there are no clinically available treatments to restore the loss of sensory information. However, researchers believe that direct vestibular stimulation may alleviate symptoms in many patients. Infrared stimulation, in particular, could provide a precise, controlled, non-contact method of stimulating the nerve.

“Aculight is pioneering infrared neural stimulation,” said Bendett. “We first developed our Capella infrared nerve stimulator to enable and encourage research applications. We’ve also received an SBIR award to develop the first optical cochlear implant. Now we’re working with two leading vestibular groups to develop an optical vestibular implant. We believe that optical nerve stimulation could revolutionize treatment for many of the neurological disorders plaguing patients today.”

Aculight hopes its optical vestibular implant technology will be a key element in the company’s medical platform, which includes the Capella R-1850, the first infrared neural stimulator. Aculight’s neural stimulation technologies will be manufactured in its ISO 9001:2000-certified manufacturing facility along with its proprietary Perseus pulsed fiber lasers and Argos optical parametric oscillators. Aculight also designs and manufactures laser-based products on an OEM basis.

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