Laser-free vision correction uses electrical current to reshape eye

What Hill and colleagues propose is instead working with the composition of the cornea to reshape the dome without removing any material from it. Made primarily of collagen, the cornea maintains its shape thanks to the arrangement of charged molecules and proteins. The researchers discovered that by applying a low-level electrical current through a specially designed platinum “contact lens” electrode, they could change the pH of the tissue, increasing the acidity of the corneal tissue, which would make it pliable just long enough to reshape – like fitting something into a mold. In this case, the mold is the platinum lens.

Then, once the current stops and the pH returns to normal, the cornea hardens again and holds its mold-fitted shape. The whole process takes about a minute, requires no cutting or removal of tissue, and, so far, has shown no structural damage or cell death in the tested samples. And the researchers believe EMR could replace LASIK surgery.

“The whole effect was discovered by accident,” said Brian Wong, a professor and surgeon at the University of California, Irvine. “I was looking at living tissues as moldable materials and discovered this whole process of chemical modification.”

In the study, researchers tested the EMR process on 12 separate rabbit eyeballs, reshaping 10 of them to mimic the corrective effect required for nearsightedness (myopia). After a short exposure to the current, each cornea conformed to the shape built into the electrode “lens”, and preliminary measurements showed successful corneal correction – with zero incisions, lasers or trauma to the eye.

While EMR is still in its early stages of development and has had limited testing – on isolated eyes, not live models – Wong added that next comes “the long march through animal studies that are detailed and precise.” The team will also determine what type of cornea corrections are possible with EMR.

“There’s a long road between what we’ve done and the clinic [and commercial use],” Hill added. “But, if we get there, this technique is widely applicable, vastly cheaper and potentially even reversible.”

A 2023 paper in the journal ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering detailed the development and use of EMR. The latest research was presented in a series of talks by researchers Michael HillDaniel Kim and Michelle Chen at the Fall 2025 meeting of the American Chemical Society this week.

Source: American Chemical Society via EurekAlert!

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