Bionic eye restores mans vision after being blind for 40 years

John Jameson had been blind for more than 40 years after an aggressive infection ended up taking his vision. Jameson would eventually come to terms with his disability, but he now has a new outlook on life after a revolutionary surgery involving a bionic eye implant restored his vision.
 
The rare procedure gained FDA approval in the United States only recently, and there are just a handful of doctors capable of performing the complex surgery. Jameson’s wife happened to learn of the surgery while researching, and she found one of the few doctors capable of performing the procedure in Shreveport, Louisiana.
 
“Well, my wife has been following it,” Jameson told Texas Standard. “It’s been in development for several years, and it now as FDA approval. There have been only a limited number in the United States. Dr. [Christopher] Shelby is the one who did the implant, he was chosen out of many many candidates to set up this team that’s doing this.”
 
Dr. Shelby’s WK Eye Institute is home to one of the few groups in the country capable of the complicated procedure. Shelby performed the surgery in April and after 40 years of darkness, Jameson miraculously regained his vision with the help of the freshly implanted bionic eye.
 
Jameson said he experienced some double vision at first that continues to impact his newly restored sight at times, but his vision grows clearer each day as his brain adjusts to the implant.
 
“When you’re a kid, you’d wake up for christmas morning, and you’d walk down and see the tree lights and the gifts and everything, the joy you get when that happens. And now that’s been happening to me for every day, because every day I wake up I can see more and more,” Jameson said. “When I wake up in the morning, I love to see nature waking up. It’s like a miracle.”