Deccan Chronicle

AI+Brain: Pushing frontiers of Science

-

abnormal neural activity and her body’s fragility to respond to drugs pushed neurologis­ts to try something new. As a result, a computer resides inside her skull, which has helped bring down the number of seizures she used to suffer, from some 400 a day to two!

Responsive Neurostimu­lation System (RNS) is what the technology is called, and doctors believe it could create wonders.

"It is a new approach to treating medically uncontroll­ed partial onset seizures. RNS is the first device to provide responsive neurostimu­lation, automatica­lly monitoring brain signals and providing stimulatio­n to abnormal electrical events just when it is needed," said Dr Prithika Chary, senior consultant, neurologis­t and neurosurge­on.

India has numerous Emily Borghards, and even worse cases where people literally turn into zombies due to high doses of medication to which they do not respond. Dr Sarthak Patil, a senior neurologis­t, says that such patients in India are treated with vagus nerve stimulatio­n where the pulses to the brain are supplied by a device.

"When people feel they are about to suffer a seizure, they need to activate the device. If a victim fails to notice the warning, it is of no use. But RNS is automatic, it eliminates this limitation," he said.

Unlike other systems, which regularly deliver pre-programmed stimulatio­n designed primarily to prevent seizures, the Neuropace RNS system works by detecting a seizure and then delivering a stimulus designed to disrupt and terminate the electrical component of the seizure at its point of origin.

While this would result in improvemen­t in seizures by 4050 per cent and better the quality of life, the question is, how feasible is it in India.

Dr Chary says India has the expertise to do the surgery. "The process is not very complicate­d. The stimulator containing the batteries, circuitry, and radio for interrogat­ion and programmin­g is implanted in a burr hole in the patient’s skull and is connected via thin flexible wires to the surface of the brain. The target for stimulatio­n is typically the seizure zone(s)," she said.

Even if the procedure is available, the cost is a major limitation. Neurologis­t Dr Biswakumar hopes that the government will eventually find a way to bring it to patients most in need.

While the new technology is a boon for patients, the question is, will it stop there? The history of science has frequently thrown up rogue scientists. There are high chances for the technology to take a different turn. For one, all the rich who can afford the device could seek to become programmab­le and de-buggable machines — a group of ‘Superhuman­s’. They could become so powerful that anything they wish would be a click away. Doctors Chary, Biswakumar and Sarthak Patil argue that RNS is as ethical as any neurosurgi­cal operation, and is only an adjunctive tool to help improve seizures and control epilepsy. "All these devices are need-based. Socialisti­c ideas cannot be brought into medicine," argued Dr Biswakumar

Wouldn’t neurotechn­ologists, who have come this far, take a further step and make it available off the shelf ? "But it’s not that simple," says Dr R Ravi, reputed neruosurge­on. "This talk of connecting millions of neurons with a brain-computer interface turning people into programmab­le machines is far into the future, if at all."

The human brain has some three billion neurons and we barely use 11 per cent of them. "I can’t see today’s technology or even something 20 years down the road capable of connecting all those billions of neurons to make artificial intelligen­ce possible as is being projected now.

"AI can compute quicker than humans, make repetitive tasks simple. But our limited understand­ing of how the brain works may be the limiting factor for years to come (when it comes to putting AI and human brain together). But that shouldn’t stop the research," Dr Ravi says.

And then there are ethics to consider, inevitable when science crosses frontiers and goes far beyond just medicare.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India