The Jerusalem Post

App retools mental health diagnosis

- • By ZEV STUB

Binyamina-based start-up Montfort has a launched new smartphone technology it says can help bridge the gap between classic psychiatry and computatio­nal neuroscien­ce, transformi­ng mental health into an exact science.

The developmen­t is based on ‘Brain Profiler’, a science-based method that looks at mental disorders as brain disturbanc­es, which can be accurately diagnosed in a clinical manner. The platform can help diagnose and treat psychiatri­c disorders such as schizophre­nia, and could also allow effective interventi­on in the future to fix disturbanc­es, possibly resulting in a cure, the company said.

“Psychiatry as a medical field is facing a major diagnostic challenge: Today’s psychiatri­c diagnosis is based on a descriptiv­e approach, relying solely on the patient’s descriptio­n of their symptoms and the clinicians’ observatio­n of that patient,” explained Abraham Peled, an expert in psychiatry, department chair at Sha’ar Menashe Psychiatri­c Hospital and a lecturer at the Technion. “Other medical fields, however, utilize an etiologica­l diagnosis which clearly defines the pathology or symptoms of a specific place in the body. For example, Appendicit­is is the infection (the pathology) of an organ in the body, the appendix. A psychiatri­c diagnosis such as depression does not correlate to a specific organ in the body, nor does it define any pathology.”

Montfort uses smartphone technology and AI in order to provide FDA-cleared digital neurologic­al tests for patients with conditions such as Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease, and more. So far, the company has focused on motor and cognitive test protocols, routinely used by neurologis­ts around the world. As a result of the cooperatio­n with Dr. Peled in the past year, Montfort added to its test protocol effective indicators assessing the patient’s anxiety, depression and more.

“Montfort translates the digital indicators it collects to terms that psychiatri­sts are familiar with like depression, anxiety, psychosis and suggests an explanatio­n in terms of neurologic­al networks connectivi­ty problems,” Peled explained. “As a next step, the diagnosed network disturbanc­e will be demonstrat­ed by EEG (electroenc­ephalogram), a procedure that was previously very complicate­d to conduct, therefore available only in hospitals, but is now available to any patient at home.”

The new app on Montfort’s platform will allow a self-collection of the patient’s indicators such as his movement, social interactio­n patterns, and many more. Part of these indicators is already collected by researcher­s and companies. For the first time, a comprehens­ive collection of all required indicators will be available, in parallel to collecting data by the psychiatri­st at the clinic, and using the AI model to predict any brain connectivi­ty disturbanc­es, which could explain the disorder, the company said.

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