Good legs 'control' paralysed partners 转载

Good legs 'control' paralysed partners

  • 09:30 29 August 2002
  • Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition
  • Duncan Graham-Rowe  
 
The new implant could help some stroke patients to walk again (Photo: FSP/GAMMA)
The new implant could help some stroke patients to walk again (Photo: FSP/GAMMA)

Two men paralysed on one side of their body can walk again, thanks to an ingenious implant that uses signals from a healthy leg to control a paralysed one.

Both men, aged 47 and 64, had been paralysed by strokes. Previously neither could walk unaided. But after sensors were placed over certain muscle groups on the healthy leg and stimulators implanted in the paralysed leg, they can now walk, stand and sit.

The unique therapy allows a patient to move their paralysed leg in a natural way without being aware that they are doing it, says Wenwei Yu, who developed the technique at Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan. But it could be another five years or more before the technology becomes available, he says.

In Yu's system, muscle sensors monitor signals from the patient's able leg. These are used to trigger pre-programmed electrical impulses in 11 electrodes implanted near nerves in the paralysed leg. This lets the paralysed leg do what the patient wants it to do - by taking its cue from the good leg.

Abnormal behaviour

Producing movement in limbs by electrically stimulating muscles or nerves is known as functional electrical stimulation. One of the difficulties of using conventional FES, says Paul Taylor, a clinical engineer at Salisbury District Hospital in Wiltshire, is overcoming "spasticity" - involuntary muscular spasms normally suppressed by the brain.

"So even if you had appropriate signals in the appropriate muscles it may not behave normally," he says. "There will also be stiffness, the muscles will be weak and activity from other muscles might be working against what you're trying to do," says Taylor.

Another problem with conventional FES, says Yu, is that patients have to activate the electrodes using their upper body, either through hand-held switches or sensors in their arms.

A certain wrist action, for example, could make a leg move. But this is far from practical, as they may want to make that same arm movement for other reasons. And while researchers have been trying out FES for many decades, much of the work on legs has focused on paraplegia, where both legs are paralysed. But hemiplegia, where only one leg is paralysed, is far more prevalent.

Falling danger

By taking advantage of the working leg to control the paralysed one, Yu avoids the problem of using the upper body to activate the electrodes. And he avoids any spasticity by tuning the electrical stimulations and their timing so that the muscles work in concert with each other to produce smooth coordinated movements.

Not only that, but the electrical stimulation itself has a therapeutic effect, preventing the leg muscles from getting stiff.

Gerald Loeb, an expert in FES at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, says Yu and his team will have to ensure their technique is safe because many hemiplegic people are elderly. One fall and they could break a hip.

Yu acknowledges these dangers but says his system uses a learning program that tailors itself to the individual patient's muscle contractions. This means it can get almost perfect recognition of the patient's intentions, which should reduce the risk of falling.

发布于3月8日 20:58 | 评论数(3) 阅读数(4612) | 我的文章

World's first brain prosthesis revealed 转载

World's first brain prosthesis revealed

  • 19:00 12 March 2003
  • Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition
  • Duncan Graham-Rowe
 
 
Hippocampus replacement
Hippocampus replacement
 

The world's first brain prosthesis - an artificial hippocampus - is about to be tested in California. Unlike devices like cochlear implants, which merely stimulate brain activity, this silicon chip implant will perform the same processes as the damaged part of the brain it is replacing.

The prosthesis will first be tested on tissue from rats' brains, and then on live animals. If all goes well, it will then be tested as a way to help people who have suffered brain damage due to stroke, epilepsy or Alzheimer's disease.

Any device that mimics the brain clearly raises ethical issues. The brain not only affects memory, but your mood, awareness and consciousness - parts of your fundamental identity, says ethicist Joel Anderson at Washington University in St Louis, Missouri.

The researchers developing the brain prosthesis see it as a test case. "If you can't do it with the hippocampus you can't do it with anything," says team leader Theodore Berger of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. The hippocampus is the most ordered and structured part of the brain, and one of the most studied. Importantly, it is also relatively easy to test its function.

The job of the hippocampus appears to be to "encode" experiences so they can be stored as long-term memories elsewhere in the brain. "If you lose your hippocampus you only lose the ability to store new memories," says Berger. That offers a relatively simple and safe way to test the device: if someone with the prosthesis regains the ability to store new memories, then it's safe to assume it works.

Model, build, interface

The inventors of the prosthesis had to overcome three major hurdles. They had to devise a mathematical model of how the hippocampus performs under all possible conditions, build that model into a silicon chip, and then interface the chip with the brain.

No one understands how the hippocampus encodes information. So the team simply copied its behaviour. Slices of rat hippocampus were stimulated with electrical signals, millions of times over, until they could be sure which electrical input produces a corresponding output. Putting the information from various slices together gave the team a mathematical model of the entire hippocampus.

They then programmed the model onto a chip, which in a human patient would sit on the skull rather than inside the brain. It communicates with the brain through two arrays of electrodes, placed on either side of the damaged area. One records the electrical activity coming in from the rest of the brain, while the other sends appropriate electrical instructions back out to the brain.

The hippocampus can be thought of as a series of similar neural circuits that work in parallel, says Berger, so it should be possible to bypass the damaged region entirely (see graphic).

Memory tasks

Berger and his team have taken nearly 10 years to develop the chip. They are about to test it on slices of rat brain kept alive in cerebrospinal fluid, they will tell a neural engineering conference in Capri, Italy, next week.

"It's a very important step because it's the first time we have put all the pieces together," he says. The work was funded by the US National Science Foundation, Office of Naval Research and Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

If it works, the team will test the prosthesis in live rats within six months, and then in monkeys trained to carry out memory tasks. The researchers will stop part of the monkey's hippocampus working and bypass it with the chip. "The real proof will be if the animal's behaviour changes or is maintained," says Sam Deadwyler of Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, who will conduct the animal trials.

The hippocampus has a similar structure in most mammals, says Deadwyler, so little will have to be changed to adapt the technology for people. But before human trials begin, the team will have to prove unequivocally that the prosthesis is safe.

Collateral damage

One drawback is that it will inevitably bypass some healthy brain tissue. But this should not affect the patient's memories, says Berger. "It would be no different from removing brain tumours," where there is always some collateral damage, says Bernard Williams, a philosopher at Britain's University of Oxford, who is an expert in personal identity.

Anderson points out that it will take time for people to accept the technology. "Initially people thought heart transplants were an abomination because they assumed that having the heart you were born with was an important part of who you are."

While trials on monkeys will tell us a lot about the prosthesis's performance, there are some questions that will not be answered. For example, it is unclear whether we have any control over what we remember. If we do, would brain implants of the future force some people to remember things they would rather forget?

The ethical consequences of that would be serious. "Forgetting is the most beneficial process we possess," Williams says. It enables us to deal with painful situations without actually reliving them.

Another ethical conundrum concerns consent to being given the prosthesis, says Anderson. The people most in need of it will be those with a damaged hippocampus and a reduced ability to form new memories. "If someone can't form new memories, then to what extent can they give consent to have this implant?"

发布于3月8日 17:59 | 评论数(0) 阅读数(4336) | 我的文章

医学奇迹:瘫痪病人大脑植入电极后能唱能跳

新浪科技讯 据《星期日泰晤士报》5日报道,一位七年来一直靠轮椅活动的年轻女子在大脑植入电极后,不仅恢复了行走能力,而且还在业余歌手表演大赛上边唱边跳,这绝对是个医学奇迹。

  这名女子名叫艾米·韦斯塔尔,今年20岁,是医学人员所开发的用于治疗帕金森氏症、抑郁症甚至瘫痪等疾病的实验性疗法的最生动案例。大脑线路“重新连接”是指将电极植

入负责特定功能的区域。移植到颈骨下面的电池向外输送小股电流,同时电流通过电线连接到大脑本身的电极上。韦斯塔尔来自英国莱斯特郡的麦尔登毛伍伯瑞,从小就患上一种称为肌张力障碍的遗传病。肌张力障碍是一种神经系统常见疾病,患者会普遍感到肌肉僵硬,不听使唤,而且经常痉挛,令患者痛不欲生,几乎不可能行走。

  英国伦敦神经病学研究所功能神经外科学教授马尔旺·哈利兹对韦斯塔尔进行了长期的实验性手术。哈利兹教授将比人发还细小的细丝植入韦斯塔尔德大脑,输送可拦截某些令其肌肉陷入痉挛状态信号的电流,结果产生了神奇的效果。韦斯塔尔说:“难以用语言形容手术对我生活的巨大改变。在手术前,我在轮椅上度过了七年痛不欲生的时光。如今,我不仅会走,还能在业余歌手表演比赛上唱歌跳舞。”

  以前,韦斯塔尔不仅要面对日渐增加的痛苦,甚至还有可能在未体会到人间欢乐之前便匆匆离去这个世界。现在,她是一所学校的助理,过去由于疾病缠身,她无法到学校接受教育,今天她正试图通过一切途径来弥补自己的这一遗憾。

  患者和医生长期以来对大脑移植技术存在警惕心理,因为许多人不由得将这种手术与脑白质切除术联系起来。脑白质切除术实施起来危险重重,而且成功率极低。不过大脑移植方面的先驱指出,这种手术的疗效具有可逆性,因为切断设备电源便可以。在对世界各地的偏头痛及妄想强迫症患者进行的手术中,他们已经取得了极富前景的结果。

  哈利兹及同事如今认为,抑郁症可能是下一个大量患者从这项技术中受益的重病。美国众多患者报告说,在移植手术后,他们的情绪普遍得到显著改善。目前,英国方面的第一项此类研究也在进行当中。英国布里斯托尔大学的一项研究正在确定研究对象。

  在此项研究中,8名30岁左右的重度抑郁症患者将在今年做手术,把四个电极移植到大脑的不同区域。领导此项研究的精神病学家安德烈·马里奇亚然后会对哪个电极和哪种频率在抑制引起抑郁症的异常信号方面最为有效进行深入研究。马里奇亚说:“高达5%的人患有周期性重度抑郁症。这种手术有可能令其中许多人的生活从此发生根本性改变。”

  另一项研究计划正在详细分析将电极植入帕金森氏综合症患者大脑后产生的效果。帕金森氏综合症会使患者丧失对肌肉的控制。现在,每年有百余名患者接受费用高达三万英镑的手术治疗。南安普顿居民迈克·罗宾斯就是其中的代表,他55岁患上了帕金森氏综合症,不久后便考虑做手术。

  罗宾斯说:“我浑身上下哆嗦得厉害,不能做任何事儿,我甚至一度产生过自杀的念头。”牛津拉德克利夫 医院的医生在对罗宾斯进行局部麻醉后,用手钻刺穿他的头骨。谈起当时的手术情景,现年62岁的罗宾斯至今心有余悸:“医生在寻找致病位置时我感到惊恐异常。可当他们找到确切位置,我的颤抖立即停止了,从此就再也没有复发。这种手术真是令人惊讶不已。”(杨孝文)

 

英国瘫痪少女脑中被植电极后恢复行走自如


http://www.sina.com.cn 2006年03月06日09:18 上海青年报

  本报讯据《泰晤士报》5日报道,20岁的英国女孩艾美·维斯因患“帕金森症”下肢瘫痪,与轮椅相伴7年。但不可思议的是,自从医生在她的大脑植入了几枚电极后,借助于遥控器调节,现在她不仅站立起来行走自如,甚至还可以唱歌跳舞。

  瘫痪7年与轮椅为伴

  据报道,这名女孩名叫艾美·维斯托,现年20岁。据悉,艾美原本活泼可爱,但大约7年前她罹患帕金森症,从此肌肉关节僵硬,肢体挛缩畸形,终日与轮椅为伴。与此同时,她还患上了精神抑郁症。

  伦敦神经学协会的功能性神经外科教授马尔万·哈里兹大夫在对艾美进行了长期认真的观察实验之后,决定为她尝试一种大胆创新的手术———在大脑中植入电极。该手术大体步骤为:第一,在患者脑壳上钻上小洞,植入数枚微型电极;第二,在患者锁骨下植入一枚微型电池;第三,用比发丝还细的电线连接电极和电池。

  手术后竟下地走路

  不可思议的是,术后异常成功。电极植入大脑后,艾美不仅肌肉痉挛症状消失了,而且还奇迹般站立了起来。据悉,幸运康复后的艾美如今不仅自愿成为一名教室辅导员,而且正努力补上由于长年治疗而丢下的学校课程。

  她激动地说:“我的生活获得了巨大改变,这种喜悦无法用语言表达。手术之前,我与轮椅相伴7年之久,现在我不仅可以行走自如,而且还可以在表演秀上歌唱跳舞。”

  据悉,目前大脑电极植入术也被用于治疗偏头痛以及精神强迫性紊乱等疾病,效果喜人。哈里兹及其同事们认为,为数众多的精神抑郁症患者接下来也有可能从这项新技术中受益。(袁海 木子)

  遥控器控制脑内电流

  手术后,医生通过体外遥控器调节患者颅内电极电流大小,运用强弱不同的电子脉冲信号控制肢体肌肉甚至调节情绪。医生说:“我们在艾美身上运用的这种技术被用于治疗帕金森症已经10到15年了,可是最近才获得突破性进展。”随着科技的发展,越来越多的先锋者指出,在人脑中植入电极手术效果是可逆的,因为只需切断电源,脑内被植入的装置便会立即停止工作。

发布于3月8日 17:15 | 评论数(0) 阅读数(4367) | 我的文章

美研究将鲨鱼变间谍 在其脑中植入电子设备 转载

美研究将鲨鱼变间谍 在其脑中植入电子设备


http://www.sina.com.cn 2006年03月05日 09:28 新京报

  本报综合报道 目前,美国研究人员正在进行一项研究,只要将特殊设备植入鲨鱼大脑,这些凶猛的动物就会乖乖地听从人类指挥,并摇身一变成为间谍,在侦查对象毫无察觉的情况下自由畅游在海洋中。

  这个不同寻常的研究项目由美国国防部设立的国防先进技术研究计划署负责。研究人员表示,美国国防部希望利用鲨鱼能灵敏感应电波、发现化学物质的天赋,通过远程控制鲨

鱼的活动,将它变身为“秘密间谍”,悄悄跟踪目标船只,这样做隐蔽性极强,很难被人发现。

  在日前举行的海洋科学会议上,研究人员展示了他们的研究成果。来自波士顿大学的研究小组在一条白斑角鲨脑内植入微小电极,将它放入浅水池内。之后,研究人员通过小型无线电接收机发出信号,刺激鲨鱼大脑中控制嗅觉的某些区域,以此控制它,使它朝某个方向游动。

  研究人员介绍说,下一步他们将进行实地试验:在给一条大青鲨植入类似装置后,将其放游到佛罗里达沿海地区进行观察,同时,其他工作人员通过植入的仪器记录鲨鱼的大脑活动,并确定鲨鱼的哪些神经用来感应气味、电场和磁场。

  据悉,由于鲨鱼大脑内的这些活动能帮助它们导航、捕捉食物,因此从理论上讲,人们可以对此加以利用,使鲨鱼能够胜任间谍角色。虽然目前对鲨鱼间谍计划还存在很大争议,但向动物脑中植入设备还是有一定好处,有助于药物研发。如果通过这种方法能了解动物大脑电波的更多信息,将来可能研发出人类大脑植入物,以此帮助瘫痪病人。

发布于3月5日 17:06 | 评论数(0) 阅读数(4380) | 我的文章

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