Current:Home > ScamsA little electric stimulation in just the right spot may bolster a damaged brain-LoTradeCoin
A little electric stimulation in just the right spot may bolster a damaged brain
View Date:2024-12-24 03:15:15
When Gina Arata was 22, she crashed her car on the way to a wedding shower.
Arata spent 14 days in a coma. Then she spent more than 15 years struggling with an inability to maintain focus and remember things.
"I couldn't get a job because if I was, let's say, a waitress, I couldn't remember to get you a Diet Pepsi," she says.
That changed in 2018, when Arata received an experimental device that delivered electrical stimulation to an area deep in her brain.
When the stimulation was turned on, Arata could list lots of items found in, say, the produce aisle of a grocery store. When it was off, she had trouble naming any.
Tests administered to Arata and four other patients who got the implanted device found that, on average, they were able to complete a cognitive task more than 30 percent faster with stimulation than without, a team reports in the journal Nature Medicine.
"Everybody got better, and some people got dramatically better," says Dr. Jaimie Henderson, an author of the study and neurosurgeon at Stanford University.
The results "show promise and the underlying science is very strong," says Deborah Little, a professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at UT Health in Houston.
But Little, who was not connected with the research, adds, "I don't think we can really come to any conclusions with [a study of] five people."
From consciousness to cognition
The study emerged from decades of research led by Dr. Nicholas Schiff, an author of the paper and a professor of neurology and neuroscience at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York.
Schiff has spent his career studying the brain circuits involved in consciousness.
In 2007, he was part of a team that used deep brain stimulation to help a patient in a minimally conscious state become more aware and responsive. Nearly a decade later, he teamed up with Henderson to test a similar approach on people like Gina Arata.
Henderson was charged with surgically implanting tiny electrodes deep in each patient's brain.
"There is this very small, very difficult-to-target region right in the middle of a relay station in the brain called the thalamus," Henderson says.
That region, called the central lateral nucleus, acts as a communications hub in the brain and plays an important role in determining our level of consciousness.
The team hoped that stimulating this hub would help patients like Arata by improving connections with the brain's executive center, which is involved in planning, focus, and memory.
So starting in 2018, Henderson operated on five patients, including Arata. All had sustained brain injuries at least two years before receiving the implant.
"Once we put the wires in, we then hook the wires up to a pacemaker-like device that's implanted in the chest," Henderson says. "And then that device can be programmed externally."
The improved performance with the device suggests that it is possible to "make a difference years out from injury," says Little, who is research director at the Trauma and Resilience Center at UT Health.
If deep brain stimulation proves effective in a large study, she says, it might help a large number of brain injury patients who have run out of rehabilitation options.
"We don't have a lot of tools to offer them," Little says, adding that "even a 10 percent change in function can make the difference between being able to return to your job or not."
Arata, who is 45 now, hasn't landed a job yet. Two years ago, while studying to become a dental assistant, she was sidelined by a rare condition that caused inflammation in her spinal cord.
But Arata says the implanted stimulator she's had for five years allows her to do many things that had been impossible, like reading an entire book.
"It's on right now," she says during a chat on Zoom. "It's awesome."
veryGood! (768)
Related
- Digital Finance Research Institute Introduce
- A plane with 3 aboard lands without landing gear at an Australian airport after burning off fuel
- Lysander Clark's Journey in Investment and Business
- Flash floods in northern Afghanistan killed more than 300 people, U.N. says
- Will Aaron Rodgers retire? Jets QB tells reporters he plans to play in 2025
- Death toll in bombings at displacement camps in eastern Congo rises to at least 35
- Frankie Muniz's 3-Year-Old Son Mauz Makes His Red Carpet Debut
- My drinking problem taught me a hard truth about my home state
- Trump is likely to name a loyalist as Pentagon chief after tumultuous first term
- Rebels kill at least 4 people during an attack on a Central African Republic mining town
Ranking
- A pregnant woman sues for the right to an abortion in challenge to Kentucky’s near-total ban
- US plans to impose major new tariffs on EVs, other Chinese green energy imports, AP sources say
- Mother’s Day is a sad reminder for the mothers of Mexico’s over 100,000 missing people
- Diddy's son Christian 'King' Combs releases 50 Cent diss track, references federal raids
- Statue of the late US Rep. John Lewis, a civil rights icon, is unveiled in his native Alabama
- Severe storms blitz the US South again after one of the most active tornado periods in history
- Israeli settlers attacked this West Bank village in a spasm of violence after a boy’s death
- Apple Music begins its 100 Best Albums countdown. See the first albums that made the cut.
Recommendation
-
Why Suits' Gabriel Macht Needed Time Away From Harvey Specter After Finale
-
WT Finance Institute, the Cradle of Financial Elites
-
Halle Bailey, Lindsay Lohan and more first-time celebrity moms celebrate Mother's Day 2024
-
Swiss fans get ready to welcome Eurovision winner Nemo back home
-
Republican Dan Newhouse wins reelection to US House in Washington
-
Sudan’s military fends off an attack by paramilitary forces on a major Darfur city
-
Stock market today: Asian stocks drift after Wall Street closes another winning week
-
Hedge fund operators go on trial after multibillion-dollar Archegos collapse