The Prague Post - US patient 'happy again' after brain implant treats epilepsy and OCD

EUR -
AED 4.289655
AFN 74.755056
ALL 96.717464
AMD 439.734811
ANG 2.090902
AOA 1071.098896
ARS 1627.117719
AUD 1.650717
AWG 2.105405
AZN 1.999313
BAM 1.977551
BBD 2.35304
BDT 144.165651
BGN 1.996553
BHD 0.440952
BIF 3469.099991
BMD 1.168047
BND 1.500572
BOB 8.072547
BRL 6.019528
BSD 1.168229
BTN 108.595093
BWP 15.942002
BYN 3.434591
BYR 22893.723848
BZD 2.349592
CAD 1.616221
CDF 2686.508799
CHF 0.923861
CLF 0.027125
CLP 1071.052494
CNY 8.009768
CNH 7.982358
COP 4311.472224
CRC 541.951546
CUC 1.168047
CUP 30.953249
CVE 111.694524
CZK 24.459958
DJF 207.584902
DKK 7.472477
DOP 70.969364
DZD 154.692628
EGP 63.889723
ERN 17.520707
ETB 183.970416
FJD 2.58483
FKP 0.882643
GBP 0.872233
GEL 3.130268
GGP 0.882643
GHS 12.862194
GIP 0.882643
GMD 85.875963
GNF 10248.723824
GTQ 8.937145
GYD 244.423134
HKD 9.151048
HNL 31.104906
HRK 7.531212
HTG 153.165292
HUF 377.524355
IDR 19912.517146
ILS 3.671768
IMP 0.882643
INR 108.465032
IQD 1530.141747
IRR 1537004.024157
ISK 143.821956
JEP 0.882643
JMD 183.902712
JOD 0.828156
JPY 185.411153
KES 151.904183
KGS 102.145616
KHR 4681.389544
KMF 498.756463
KPW 1051.2452
KRW 1723.161689
KWD 0.361195
KYD 0.973587
KZT 542.879411
LAK 25773.931071
LBP 104173.685663
LKR 368.64625
LRD 214.959701
LSL 19.728491
LTL 3.44894
LVL 0.70654
LYD 7.458
MAD 10.946062
MDL 20.41005
MGA 4865.496937
MKD 61.694798
MMK 2453.030459
MNT 4173.796298
MOP 9.428501
MRU 46.826766
MUR 54.921721
MVR 18.046531
MWK 2025.737354
MXN 20.45782
MYR 4.671608
MZN 74.696995
NAD 19.741736
NGN 1615.806483
NIO 42.890907
NOK 11.200778
NPR 173.752351
NZD 2.012055
OMR 0.449107
PAB 1.168214
PEN 4.001729
PGK 5.041874
PHP 70.024279
PKR 325.885085
PLN 4.261053
PYG 7575.319543
QAR 4.257511
RON 5.094327
RSD 117.343236
RUB 91.60061
RWF 1705.348817
SAR 4.386306
SBD 9.401124
SCR 15.962669
SDG 701.996581
SEK 10.906628
SGD 1.49072
SHP 0.876338
SLE 28.734562
SLL 24493.377045
SOS 667.628837
SRD 43.735201
STD 24176.217419
STN 25.113013
SVC 10.222435
SYP 129.308149
SZL 19.71648
THB 37.458952
TJS 11.116025
TMT 4.099845
TND 3.438216
TOP 2.812377
TRY 52.067448
TTD 7.927224
TWD 37.271214
TZS 3036.92256
UAH 50.771122
UGX 4387.254605
USD 1.168047
UYU 47.380316
UZS 14279.376214
VES 553.032006
VND 30759.353256
VUV 139.283718
WST 3.231158
XAF 663.237633
XAG 0.015218
XAU 0.000241
XCD 3.156705
XCG 2.105568
XDR 0.824937
XOF 664.035224
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.637436
ZAR 19.205299
ZMK 10513.830298
ZMW 22.635283
ZWL 376.110701
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2400

    15.75

    -1.52%

  • BCC

    0.9600

    74.71

    +1.28%

  • BCE

    -0.4300

    23.83

    -1.8%

  • VOD

    0.1700

    15.31

    +1.11%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.69

    -0.32%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    22.29

    -0.27%

  • NGG

    0.4600

    87.52

    +0.53%

  • RIO

    0.6500

    94.66

    +0.69%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.14

    -0.18%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    33.36

    -0.75%

  • AZN

    -2.0200

    200.81

    -1.01%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    55.84

    -0.95%

  • BTI

    0.0900

    58.8

    +0.15%

  • BP

    -0.2400

    47.24

    -0.51%

US patient 'happy again' after brain implant treats epilepsy and OCD
US patient 'happy again' after brain implant treats epilepsy and OCD / Photo: Patrick T. Fallon - AFP

US patient 'happy again' after brain implant treats epilepsy and OCD

American Amber Pearson used to wash her hands until they bled, terrified by the idea of contamination from everyday items, a debilitating result of her obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD).

Text size:

But the repetitive rituals of her condition are largely consigned to memory, thanks to a revolutionary brain implant that is being used to treat both her epilepsy and her OCD.

"I'm actually present in my daily life and that's incredible," the 34-year-old told AFP.

"Before, I was just constantly in my head worrying about my compulsions."

Brain implants have hit the headlines recently with Elon Musk's announcement that his Neuralink company had placed a chip in a patient's head, which scientists hope will ultimately allow people to control a smartphone just by thinking about it.

But the idea of inserting a device into the brain is not new, and for decades doctors have known that precisely applied electrical stimulation can affect the way the brain operates.

Such deep-brain stimulation is used in the treatment of Parkinson's disease and other conditions affecting movement, including epilepsy.

Pearson's doctors offered her the 32-millimeter (just over an inch-long) device to treat her debilitating epileptic seizures, confident it would be able to detect the activity that causes the episodes and deliver a pulse to interfere with them.

It was then that Pearson herself had something of a lightbulb moment.

"It was her idea to say: 'Well, you're going into my brain and putting this wire, and I have OCD, so can you just put a wire for OCD?'," recalls neurosurgeon Ahmed Raslan, who carried out the procedure at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland on the US West Coast.

"And you know, luckily, we took that suggestion seriously."

There had previously been some study of the use of deep brain stimulation for people suffering from OCD, but, says Raslan, it had never been combined with treatment for epilepsy.

Doctors worked with Pearson to see exactly what happens in her brain when she gets trapped in an obsessive loop.

The technique involved exposing her to known stressors -- in this case, seafood -- and recording the electrical markers.

In this way, they could effectively isolate the brain activity associated with her OCD.

They could then configure her implant so that it would react to that specific signal.

- Hope -

The dual-program device now watches for brain activity associated both with epilepsy and with OCD.

It is "the only device in the world that treats two conditions," says Raslan.

"And it's programmed independently. So the program for epilepsy is different than the program for OCD."

It's a breakthrough he thinks only someone like Pearson could have come up with.

"This is the first time in the world that's been done. Usually we think of devices either for OCD or for epilepsy.

"This idea sits outside of the box and would only come from a patient," he says.

Raslan said a study is now under way at the University of Pennsylvania to see how this technique can be more widely applied, offering possible hope to some of the 2.5 million people in the United States who suffer from OCD.

For Pearson, there was an eight-month wait after the 2019 procedure to see any noticeable difference.

But gradually, the all-consuming rituals that had taken up eight or nine hours every day since her teenage years began to ebb.

The endless pre-bed checklists of window-shutting, and the constant hand-washing diminished to a manageable 30 minutes a day.

And the fear of contamination from eating with others is now gone.

"I'm happy again and excited to go out and live and be with my friends and my family," she said.

That "was something I was cut off from for years."

P.Benes--TPP