Researchers are aiming to find the right stimulation patterns for individual patients’ brains to help stop their seizures. — 123rf
Using deep brain stimulation techniques, neuroscientists at Mayo Clinic in the United States are looking for early signals in the brain to help stop seizures.
In their biomarker discovery initiative, the researchers are assessing how different stimulation patterns affect different parts of the brain.
The goal, says neurosurgeon Dr Jonathon Parker, is to personalise therapeutic brain stimulation settings for individual patients with epilepsy and other neurological disorders.
When there’s a mystery, it’s crucial to find a clue.
“We’re looking for that brain signal fingerprint, if you will, that, yes, these are the right stimulation settings that are pushing the brain toward a state where seizures are less likely,” says the director of Mayo Clinic’s Device-Based Neuroelectronics Research Lab.
A seizure is like an electrical storm in the brain.
Epilepsy is the most common cause of seizures.
“For patients having multiple attacks – sometimes per day or per week – if we’re able to dramatically reduce them, it allows them to live their life in a much more predictable fashion, easier for them to do the things that they like to do in life without having to live in fear of these uncontrolled neurological attacks,” he says.
For a third of patients with epilepsy, medication does not control their seizures.
Some patients are able to have surgery to remove brain tissue where their seizures start if doing so does not damage parts of the brain that, for example, control speech or motor skills.
Other types of treatments, including deep brain stimulation, may be appropriate for some patients.
Deep brain stimulation involves implanting electrodes in the brain that produce electrical impulses to treat certain medical conditions, such as epilepsy.
The research team includes engineers, clinicians and neuroscientists who analyse the brain’s electrical signals and extract meaning for the right settings for an individual patient’s deep brain stimulation device.
“Our moonshot goal is to use therapeutic stimulation to completely stop seizures,” Dr Parker says.
“This is what we are working toward: to return control and predictability to our patients’ lives.”
