Scientists give sight back to this monkey through a human stem cell transplant, could the blind be witnessing the beginning of gaining usable vision?

  • In our last Paschall Power Newsletter,  we discussed the FDA’s immediate approval for continued research and advancements for “Blind Sight,” the next generation of brain implants from Neuralink, which is aimed at giving sight to the sightless. Today’s blog is excited to announce another breakthrough for blind people, this time a successful “Human Stem Cell Transplant,” has indeed given sight back to a monkey, yes, we did say “human,” this is very promising for the world’s blind population.

The transplant repaired a hole in the monkey’s retina, current human retina  surgery, does  provide correction, but the percentages vary, and the possibility of other issues may occur, check out the below information concerning the successful human stem cell transplant, performed in a monkey:

“The researchers describe how they used human stem cells to create a patch, which they then used to fix the macular hole in the monkey’s eye.”

Blind people should be cautiously optimistic during these times, we have now reported two different break throughs concerning giving sight to the sightless in the same month, as a fully blind man, who could see at one time, “I’m absolutely ready baby, pass the car keys and let’s ride again.”

  • Activate the below link, for more about the successful human stem cell transplant that returned sight to a monkey💡

Scientists used human stem cells to restore a monkey’s vision

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