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Alzheimer's patient implanted with brain pacemaker

Source:Ohio State University Wexner Med Release Date:2013-01-30 255
Medical Equipment
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is used to treat Alzheimer’s through brain pacemaker in a landmark Ohio State's Wexner Medical Center study

DURING a five-hour surgery last October at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center (Columbus, Ohio, USA), Kathy Sanford became the first Alzheimer’s patient in the United States to have a pacemaker implanted in her brain.

She is the first of up to 10 patients who will be enrolled in an FDA-approved study at Ohio State’s Wexner Medical Center to determine if using a brain pacemaker can improve cognitive and behavioral functioning in patients with Alzheimer’s disease.

The study employs the use of deep brain stimulation (DBS), the same technology used to successfully treat about 100,000 patients worldwide with movement disorders such as Parkinson’s disease. In the study, researchers hope to determine whether DBS surgery can improve function governed by the frontal lobe and neural networks involved in cognition and behavior by stimulating certain areas of the brain with a pacemaker.

Dr. Douglas Scharre, neurologist and director of the division of cognitive neurology, and Dr. Ali Rezai, neurosurgeon and director of the neuroscience program, both at Wexner Medical Center, are conducting the study.

“If the early findings that we’re seeing continue to be robust and progressive, then I think that will be very promising and encouraging for us,” said Rezai, who also directs the Center for Neuromodulation at Ohio State. “But so far we are cautiously optimistic.”

The deep brain stimulation implant is similar to a cardiac pacemaker device with the exception that the pacemaker wires are implanted in the brain rather than the heart.

“Basically, the pacemakers send tiny signals into the brain that regulate the abnormal activity of the brain and normalize it more,” said Dr. Rezai. “Right now, from what we’re seeing in our first patient, I think the results are encouraging, but this is research. We need to do more research and understand what’s going on.”

The study, which will enroll people with mild or early-stage Alzheimer’s disease, will help determine if DBS has the potential to improve cognitive, behavioral and functional deficits.

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