Scientists use ultrasound to jump-start
a man's brain after coma
By
Dr.Fourkan Ali
New noninvasive
technique may lead to low-cost therapy for patients with severe brain injury
A 25-year-old man
recovering from a coma has made remarkable progress following a treatment to
jump-start his brain using ultrasounds, scientists report. This is the first
time such an approach to severe brain injury has been tried.
A 25-year-old man
recovering from a coma has made remarkable progress following a treatment at
UCLA to jump-start his brain using ultrasound. The technique uses sonic
stimulation to excite the neurons in the thalamus, an egg-shaped structure that
serves as the brain's central hub for processing information.
"It's almost as
if we were jump-starting the neurons back into function," said Martin
Monti, the study's lead author and a UCLA associate professor of psychology and
neurosurgery. "Until now, the only way to achieve this was a risky
surgical procedure known as deep brain stimulation, in which electrodes are
implanted directly inside the thalamus," he said. "Our approach
directly targets the thalamus but is noninvasive."
Monti said the
researchers expected the positive result, but he cautioned that the procedure
requires further study on additional patients before they determine whether it
could be used consistently to help other people recovering from comas.
"It is possible
that we were just very lucky and happened to have stimulated the patient just
as he was spontaneously recovering," Monti said.
A report on the
treatment is published in the journal Brain Stimulation. This is the first time the approach has been
used to treat severe brain injury.
The technique, called
low-intensity focused ultrasound pulsation, was pioneered by Alexander
Bystritsky, a UCLA professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences in the
Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior and a co-author of the
study. Bystritsky is also a founder of Brainsonix, a Sherman Oaks,
California-based company that provided the device the researchers used in the
study.
That device, about the
size of a coffee cup saucer, creates a small sphere of acoustic energy that can
be aimed at different regions of the brain to excite brain tissue. For the new
study, researchers placed it by the side of the man's head and activated it 10
times for 30 seconds each, in a 10-minute period.
Monti said the device
is safe because it emits only a small amount of energy -- less than a
conventional Doppler ultrasound.
Before the procedure
began, the man showed only minimal signs of being conscious and of
understanding speech -- for example, he could perform small, limited movements
when asked. By the day after the treatment, his responses had improved
measurably. Three days later, the patient had regained full consciousness and
full language comprehension, and he could reliably communicate by nodding his
head "yes" or shaking his head "no." He even made a
fist-bump gesture to say goodbye to one of his doctors.
"The changes were
remarkable," Monti said.
The technique targets
the thalamus because, in people whose mental function is deeply impaired after
a coma, thalamus performance is typically diminished. And medications that are
commonly prescribed to people who are coming out of a coma target the thalamus
only indirectly.
Under the direction of
Paul Vespa, a UCLA professor of neurology and neurosurgery at the David Geffen
School of Medicine at UCLA, the researchers plan to test the procedure on
several more people beginning this fall at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical
Center. Those tests will be conducted in partnership with the UCLA Brain Injury
Research Center and funded in part by the Dana Foundation and the Tiny Blue Dot
Foundation.
If the technology
helps other people recovering from coma, Monti said, it could eventually be
used to build a portable device -- perhaps incorporated into a helmet -- as a
low-cost way to help "wake up" patients, perhaps even those who are
in a vegetative or minimally conscious state. Currently, there is almost no
effective treatment for such patients, he said.
The study's other
co-authors are Vespa, who holds UCLA's Gary L. Brinderson Family Chair in
Neurocritical Care and is director of neurocritical care at the Ronald Reagan
UCLA Medical Center; Caroline Schnakers, a UCLA neurosurgery researcher; and
Alexander Korb, a Semel Institute researcher.
Story
Source:
The above post is
reprinted from materials provided by University of
California - Los Angeles. The original item was written by Stuart Wolpert.Note: Content may be
edited for style and length.
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