New Study Reveals Potential Path to Reversing Amblyopia Using Eye Anesthetic in Mice

December 4, 2025
New Study Reveals Potential Path to Reversing Amblyopia Using Eye Anesthetic in Mice
  • The bursts in the LGN appear crucial for recovery, as mice genetically modified to prevent these bursts did not show improvement, indicating the mechanism relies on this early synchronized activity.

  • The technique has only been tested in animals so far; researchers caution that it remains to be studied for safety and effectiveness in humans, noting that similar burst-triggering effects have been observed when the non-amblyopic eye is temporarily anesthetized.

  • Scientists envision that noninvasive brain-stimulation approaches might eventually replicate these bursts without injections, offering a potential future therapy for amblyopia in both adults and children.

  • MIT and prior work showed that inactivating the non-amblyopic eye can also promote recovery, suggesting that re-creating early visual system activity patterns may drive the plasticity needed to treat amblyopia.

  • Researchers report that temporarily shutting down the weaker eye in mice using the local anesthetic tetrodotoxin can trigger synchronized bursts in the LGN, offering a potential path to reversing amblyopia even after long-standing vision issues.

  • The study emphasizes that findings are preliminary and limited to animal models, underscoring the need for further research to evaluate safety, efficacy, and practical application in humans.

  • In a mouse study published in Cell Reports, inactivating the amblyopic eye led to more balanced input to the visual cortex from both eyes a week later, suggesting the weak eye could catch up once activity patterns are reactivated.

Summary based on 1 source


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