They don't tell you what area of the brain is being read, motor cortex? Pre-motor cortex? Executive control? What are the criteria for patients that might be helped?
http://the-japan-news.com/news/article/0003477289
Keio University and Panasonic
Corp. will begin clinical tests as early as March for putting a
rehabilitation device for cerebral stroke patients into practical use.
The tests will take place under the initiative of doctors. The device
will read changes in the brain waves of cerebral stroke patients and
move their paralyzed fingers with the help of machines. The aim is to
help them recover nerve circuits.
In a serious cerebral stroke, the nerve circuits running from the brains of patients are damaged, resulting in paralysis.
There are about 1.2 million cerebral stroke patients in Japan. About 20
percent of them have suffered serious paralysis and are unable to move
their fingers, even 90 days or more after suffering a stroke. Until
recently, there have been no effective methods to treat the paralysis.
A team of researchers led by two Keio University researchers — Meigen
Liu, a professor of rehabilitation medicine, and Junichi Ushiba, an
associate professor of science and engineering — analyzed changes in
brain waves when patients intended to spread their fingers.
The
researchers developed a machine to spread the patients’ fingers for them
when sensors attached to their heads detected the changes, and at the
same time send an electrical stimulus into the patients’ arms.
Recovery of nerve circuits is encouraged through repeating the physical
movements and electrical stimulus that respond to brain waves.
Previously, 42 patients who were unable to move their fingers at all
were asked to take part in special rehabilitation programs using the
device for 40 minutes a day for 10 days, in addition to ordinary
rehabilitation programs. Of those people, 29 were able to move their
fingers again.
Hiroshi Goto, a 54-year-old research fellow of
Dai-ichi Life Research Institute Inc. whose left side became paralyzed
due to a brain hemorrhage in 2010, was able to move his fingers in the
special rehabilitation programs.
“I repeatedly undertook other
kinds of rehabilitation programs, but was unable to move my fingers at
all. I once felt helpless, but now I have hope,” he said.
The clinical
test will be conducted at four hospitals, including Keio University
Hospital. About 20 patients will be asked to use the device, and the
research team will examine its effectiveness and safety.
Toshiki
Yoshimine, a special assigned professor of neurosurgery at Osaka
University, said: “Rehabilitating cerebral stroke patients requires
training not only their muscles but also their brains. This method is
groundbreaking, and I have expectations.”Speech
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