Medical

Brain implant allows mind control of computers in first human trials

Brain implant allows mind control of computers in first human trials
Philip O'Keefe is able to use a computer thanks to the Stentrode system
Philip O'Keefe is able to use a computer thanks to the Stentrode system
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A Stentrode was implanted into a human patient for the first time in August last year, and then into another subject in April of this year
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A Stentrode was implanted into a human patient for the first time in August last year, and then into another subject in April of this year
Philip O'Keefe is able to use a computer thanks to the Stentrode system
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Philip O'Keefe is able to use a computer thanks to the Stentrode system
The Stentrode device is the size of a matchstick, and enters the brain via a small keyhole incision in the neck
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The Stentrode device is the size of a matchstick, and enters the brain via a small keyhole incision in the neck
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Human trials for a first-of-a-kind device designed to treat the brain via electrical stimulation have brought some very promising results. Called Stentrode, the implant has the potential to treat a wide range of neurological conditions, but in these very first trials, has brought about significant quality-of-life improvements for a pair of Australian men suffering from motor neurone disease (MND).

We got our first glimpse at the Stentrode device back in 2016, when researchers in Australia demonstrated a new kind of implant in the brains of sheep. The idea was to offer a way of recording brain activity and stimulating the organ without needing invasive surgery where a piece of the skull is carved out to insert wires and electrodes.

Instead, Stentrode can be implanted through a small keyhole incision in the neck, with the matchstick-sized device then guided through a blood vessel by X-ray until it rests over the motor cortex, the brain region responsible for planning and carrying out voluntary movements. Here it is able to monitor electrical signals coming from the brain, and also stimulate brain regions that correspond with particular muscle movements, as demonstrated in the pre-clinical trials on sheep.

The Stentrode device is the size of a matchstick, and enters the brain via a small keyhole incision in the neck
The Stentrode device is the size of a matchstick, and enters the brain via a small keyhole incision in the neck

Stentrode was implanted into a human patient for the first time in August last year, and then into another subject in April of this year. These two Australian men both suffer from MND, with both now using the technology at home as part of their day-to-day activities.

Phillip O’Keefe, the second recipient, has lost strength and flexibility in his arms over the past six month due to the progression of the disease, which slowly kills neurons in the brain and eventually leads to paralysis. This has left him unable to use a computer keyboard with his hands, but he is now finding some success using the Stentrode device instead.

The implant records his brain activity and transmits it wirelessly to a small receiver worn on his chest, and onward to a computer that translates the signals into onscreen commands. Throughout the trial, both subjects were able to use the device in this way to carry out click-and-zoom actions with an accuracy of more than 90 percent. They could also type at speeds of up to 20 characters per minute.

“It’s about re-training your brain to operate in a different way,” says O’Keefe. “It’s just concentration, but like riding a bike it becomes second nature.”

A Stentrode was implanted into a human patient for the first time in August last year, and then into another subject in April of this year
A Stentrode was implanted into a human patient for the first time in August last year, and then into another subject in April of this year

O’Keefe is now able to use the Stentrode system to surf the internet, write emails, do part-time work in data entry and check his online banking. By thinking about moving his left ankle, he is able to perform a mouse click.

“To bring this technology to fruition, to now get it to the clinical stage where it is actually helping someone, is what we dreamed about when we started out,” says neurologist Associate Professor Tom Oxley, who has been working on the Stentrode device at the University of Melbourne since 2011.

Part of the original motivation for the development of Stentrode was to enable sufferers of paralysis to control robotic exoskeletons. The researchers say this remains part of the long-term plan, but next up are more studies exploring how it can be used to carry out basic computer functions, with the third trial participant already having received their implant. The team hopes to receive FDA approval in around five years.

You can hear from O’Keefe in the video below, while the study was published in the Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery.

Stentrode™: Translating thought into action

Source: University of Melbourne

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1 comment
Tristan P
Wow, amazing stuff.