A variable range bi-phasic current stimulus driver circuitry for an implantable retinal prosthetic device

This paper reports a driver circuitry to generate bi-phasic (anodic and cathodic) current pulses for stimulating the retinal layer through electrodes which is part of a retinal prosthetic device for implants in blind patients affected by retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Dual voltage architecture is used to halve the number of interface leads from the chip to the stimulation sites compared to a single voltage supply. The driver circuitry is designed to deliver currents with six bit resolution for a wide range of full scale currents up to 600 /spl mu/A. To cater to the varying stimulus requirements among patients and different regions of the retina, variable gain architecture is used to achieve fine resolution even for a narrow range of stimulus. 1:8 demultiplexing feature is embedded within the output stage thus allowing one DAC for eight outputs. A novel charge cancellation circuitry with current limiting capability is implemented to discharge the electrodes for medical safety. Measurement results of a prototype chip fabricated in 1.5-/spl mu/m CMOS technology are presented.

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