Medical

Wearable system designed to predict seizures

Wearable system designed to predict seizures
Unexpected epileptic seizures are not only unsettling, but they can also result in injuries
Unexpected epileptic seizures are not only unsettling, but they can also result in injuries
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Unexpected epileptic seizures are not only unsettling, but they can also result in injuries
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Unexpected epileptic seizures are not only unsettling, but they can also result in injuries

Although medication does help control seizures in some epilepsy patients, it doesn't have much of an effect on others. A new system is designed to help the latter group, by at least letting them know when seizures are about to occur.

Created by scientists at Israel's Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, the Epiness system consists of two parts – an array of scalp-mounted EEG (electroencephalography) electrodes that monitor the electrical activity of their brain, and a linked microprocessor running machine learning-based algorithms. Those algorithms were trained on EEG data from a "large dataset" of epilepsy patients, which was gathered when they both were and were not experiencing seizures.

By learning which patterns consistently occurred in the electrical activity that immediately preceded seizures, the algorithms were ultimately able to predict their onset with a 97-percent rate of accuracy. The algorithms are additionally able to differentiate between the brain's electrical signals and distracting background "noise." This means that only a few electrodes need to ultimately be used, with the system reportedly remaining 95-percent accurate.

"Epileptic seizures expose epilepsy patients to various preventable hazards, including falls, burns and other injuries," says the lead scientist, Dr. Oren Shriki. "We are therefore very excited that the machine-learning algorithms that we developed enable accurate prediction of impending seizures up to one hour prior to their occurrence."

The Epiness technology has been licensed to Ben-Gurion spinoff company NeuroHelp, which is developing it further. Plans call for a prototype to be assessed in clinical trials later this year.

A German consortium is also working on a seizure-predicting earpiece, that detects telltale increases in the wearer's pulse.

Source: American Associates, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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1 comment
paul314
If this can be proven out, it could make an enormous difference for people with seizure disorders. Even a few minutes warning would mean people could engage in all kinds of activities that they can't safely do now, from driving to simply walking unassisted across the street.