PHOTO: Dr. Helen Mayberg
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Brain stimulator's brain: Michigan engineers built a chip to alter brain
stimulation parameters according to recordings
from the brain.
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19 June 2008—For more than a decade, doctors have been
implanting devices called deep-brain stimulators into
patients with Parkinson’s disease and stimulating a
small area of their brains with low-voltage electrical
pulses. So far, there’s been only one way to tell how
patients are taking to the treatment: by watching. Are
they walking smoothly again? Can they hold their hands
in front of them without trembling? But a better way to
evaluate treatment is to ask the brain directly. In such
a system, neuronal feedback would direct the timing,
location, and intensity of subsequent stimulation and
would theoretically suppress side
effects that many patients suffer today. A
group of neural engineers from the University of
Michigan, tackling a pivotal piece of the problem, have
designed a programmable device capable of stimulating
and recording from the brain simultaneously.
“It’s what a lot of people have talked about for a
really long time, but nobody’s done it,” says Jerrold
Vitek, a neurologist at the Cleveland Clinic, in Ohio,
who treats patients with deep-brain stimulators and was
not involved with the research.
Vitek describes the available technology as “first
generation.” The devices, manufactured by Medtronic,
electrically stimulate the subthalamic nucleus, a
structure deep inside the brain, through four
electrodes. When electrical impulses hit the targeted
cells, the tremors associated with Parkinson’s disease
subside; however, the quality of treatment greatly
depends on how well surgeons implant these four
electrodes. A misplaced lead could stimulate surrounding
tissue and cause changes in the patient’s mood and
cognition. Such a positioning error was recently found
to be a leading cause of the therapy’s failure. Even
with a perfect implant, patients have only one control
parameter: on or off. So what you have is an inflexible
system trying to control a highly variable and plastic organ.
“The idea is that one size does not fit all in terms
of stimulation programming,” says Daryl Kipke, who, with
his colleagues, present their closed-loop system today
at the IEEE-cosponsored Symposia on VLSI Technology and
Circuits, in Hawaii. “One way to provide
more-specialized stimulation, or specialized treatment,
through deep-brain stimulation is to develop a
closed-loop system.”
Kipke and his colleagues have designed a system that
integrates neural recordings from eight electrodes and
uses them to program the amplitude, repetition rate, and
duration of pulse generation in a 64-channel stimulator.
Their goal is to get every component of the design onto
a single chip, including the amplifier that connects to
the probe, the data circuits, the digital filters, and
the microprocessor that decides if, how, and when to
stimulate. For now, however, the microprocessor is
separate from the rest of the system, which resides on
its own chip. “A microprocessor gives information to the
chip about where and how, and the chip takes care of the
rest,” says Michael Flynn, a leader of the project.