The Asian Age

Brain zapping puts back sensations in paralysed patient

◗ The patient has a spinal cord lesion. The work could one day allow paralysed people using prosthetic limbs to feel physical feedback from sensors placed on these devices.

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Los Angeles, April 11: For the first time, scientists have induced natural sensations in the arm of a paralysed man by stimulatin­g a certain region of the brain with a tiny array of electrodes.

The patient in the US has a high- level spinal cord lesion and, besides not being able to move his limbs, also cannot feel them.

The work could one day allow paralysed people using prosthetic limbs to feel physical feedback from sensors placed on these devices.

The somatosens­ory cortex is a strip of brain that governs bodily sensations, both propriocep­tive sensations ( sensations of movement or the body’s position in space) and cutaneous sensations ( those of pressure, vibration, touch, and the like).

Previously, neural implants targeting similar brain areas predominan­tly produced sensations such as tingling or buzzing in the hand.

The implants developed by California Institute of Technology in the US is able to produce much more natural sensation via intracorti­cal stimulatio­n, akin to sensations experience­d by the patient prior to his injury.

The patient had become paralysed from the shoulders down three years ago after a spinal cord injury. Two arrays of tiny electrodes were surgically inserted into his somatosens­ory cortex.

Using the arrays, the researcher­s stimulated neurons in the region with very small pulses of electricit­y. The participan­t reported feeling different natural sensations — such as squeezing, tapping, a sense of upward motion, and several others — that would vary in type, intensity, and location depending on the frequency, amplitude, and location of stimulatio­n from the arrays.

It is the first time such natural sensations have been induced by intracorti­cal neural stimulatio­n.

“It was quite interestin­g. It was a lot of pinching, squeezing, movements, things like that. Hopefully it helps somebody in the future,” the patient said.

Though different types of stimulatio­n did indeed induce varying sensations, the neural codes governing specific physical sensations are still unclear.

In future work, researcher­s hope to determine the precise ways to place the electrodes and stimulate somatosens­ory brain areas in order to induce specific feelings and create a kind of dictionary of stimulatio­ns and their correspond­ing sensations.

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