Scottish Daily Mail

Nerve zappers that could utterly TRANSFORM OUR LIVES

Insomnia. Headaches. Faulty hearts. Severe Covid... just some of the major conditions helped by new gadgets (some available at chemists) that tap in to your nervous system. And the implicatio­ns, experts say, could be staggering

- By PAT HAGAN

WHat if there were a single treatment that could help heart disease and depression, insomnia and painful joints — even Covid-19. In fact, some scientists believe such a remedy could be readily available on the NHS within the next few years, and it is already being rolled out for some conditions.

the treatment involves gently stimulatin­g a major nerve that runs through the body using an electric current so mild that in most people it causes just a slight tingling sensation.

Called vagus nerve stimulatio­n (VNS), it works by sending or interferin­g with electrical nerve signals to and from the brain. VNS is attracting interest from scientists around the world as a potentiall­y highly effective, drug-free remedy for numerous conditions — and there are now at-home devices that claim to do this, too (see panel below).

the latest discovery is that VNS may help reduce the impact of Covid-19. In a threemonth trial at a hospital in Buenos aires, argentina, 51 patients admitted to hospital with severe Covid-19 were given VNS to dampen down life-threatenin­g inflammati­on in their airways caused when the immune system overreacts.

the results showed VNS led to ‘a low rate of adverse events, infrequent mechanical ventilatio­n, and a high rate of survival’, reported the Journal of Emerging Diseases and Virology in July.

this is just one of a number of clinical trials under way to assess the use of VNS in Covid patients.

‘I think in future, vagus nerve stimulatio­n will be a routine treatment for a wide range of diseases and disorders,’ says Dr Ben Metcalfe, a specialist in electrical engineerin­g at Bath University.

‘It has huge potential because the vagus nerve connects the brain with many parts of the body, carrying electrical signals that control everything we do.

‘If we can change those signals, we can change the way things work in the body.’

the vagus nerve, which is roughly 3mm in diameter, is the longest nerve in the body, linking the brain to organs all over the body such as the heart, lungs, liver, kidneys and digestive system (‘vagus’ comes from the Latin for wandering).

SCIENtIStS describe it as the ‘motorway’ of the nervous system, allowing nerve signals to travel in both directions, so the brain can understand what’s going on in different parts of the body and also transmit instructio­ns to keep everything running smoothly.

It helps to manage everything from our breathing, heart rate and sense of taste to blood pressure, alertness and speech.

Vagus nerve stimulatio­n first emerged as a medical therapy in the 1980s, when doctors began to use it to treat severe epilepsy that did not respond to medicines.

Here, a small generator, the size of a matchbox, is placed in the chest under a general anaestheti­c and is connected to the vagus nerve with wires, where it runs just beneath the skin in the neck.

Electrical impulses from the generator — triggered by the patient when they feel a fit coming on by waving a special magnet over the implant — travel up the nerve and into the brain, dampening down the irregular electrical activity that causes seizures.

It works in around 50 per cent of cases, halving the number of seizures and reducing their length and severity. But it can have sideeffect­s such as persistent coughing, sore throat and stomach or neck pain, because the stimulatio­n can irritate the nerve where it runs through these areas.

according to some estimates, around 3 per cent of implant patients develop an infection around the site, while one in ten of the devices can develop broken leads, which can stop them working and need replacing. But now the treatment has been simplified by using external generators that don’t require surgery — such as ear clips — and has been tested to help tackle some of our major health problems, for example, correcting the faulty heart rhythms that drasticall­y increase the risk of a stroke, or boosting levels of feelgood chemicals in the brain to banish depression.

Here we look at some the latest uses for VNS, some that are already available and others that will soon be offered.

HEADACHES Available now

‘CLUStEr’ headaches are so

painful they’re widely known as ‘suicide’ headaches, with studies suggesting that up to two-thirds of sufferers have contemplat­ed taking their own lives during an attack. Ordinary painkiller­s such as paracetamo­l or ibuprofen have little or no effect.

In 2019, NHS England agreed to fund a £3,000-a-year therapy that uses a handheld vagus nerve

stimulator — called gammacore — that is pressed against the side of the neck for two minutes to interrupt the flow of pain signals in

the brain. Gel is applied to two electrodes on the top of the device, it is held firmly against the neck and, at the press of a button, a mild electric current zaps the vagus nerve. Patients feel a deep vibration but no pain.

It can be used at the first sign of a cluster headache to ease pain, or daily to prevent them.

nhS england says the device is being made available to ‘anyone who needs it’.

In Scotland, gammacore can be accessed through headache specialist­s in Glasgow and Aberdeen. currently, selected nhS Scotland

health boards have agreed to pay for gammacore for patients suffering with treatment refractory cluster headaches once they are confirmed as receptive to therapy.

FAULTY HEARTS Available in 2-3 years

In recenT years, researcher­s have experiment­ed with using special ear clips connected to a

pocket-sized power pack — rather than implants — to deliver vagus nerve stimulatio­n. That’s because a tiny branch of the nerve reaches the auricular concha, the shell-like entrance to the ear.

The rationale is that delivering a mild electric current into this part of the ear is safer and less invasive than implanting a generator.

clinical trials are under way to see if the ear-tickling therapy can cure atrial fibrillati­on, an abnormal heartbeat that affects more than one million people in the uK, causing an estimated 16,000 strokes a year.

It happens when electrical activity in the heart goes haywire, sending faulty electrical messages to the heart muscle and causing it to beat irregularl­y (called

arrhythmia­s), which raises the risk of clots forming inside the heart that can travel to the brain and cause a stroke. Treatments include the blood-thinning drug warfarin, to stop clots forming, cardiovers­ion (where the heart is shocked back into a normal rhythm) or ablation, in which probes heated up to 70c are fed into the heart via an incision, to destroy the tissue generating the faulty rhythms.

Although effective, this can damage surroundin­g healthy heart tissue, causing scarring, and people often need repeat procedures.

A trial at oklahoma university in 2018 found patients with atrial fibrillati­on given one hour a day of VnS through ear clips, experience­d an 85 per cent drop in the number of episodes of arrhythmia over the next six months .

Dr Svetlana Mastitskay­a, a researcher at university college london, who is studying VnS to treat heart conditions, says: ‘We think we can use it to shield against the abnormal electrical signals causing atrial fibrillati­on, without the need for ablation.

‘Vagus nerve stimulatio­n stops the abnormal signals from reaching the cardiac muscle and causing an abnormal rhythm.’

however, the treatment is not without risk. Studies show up to one in 1,000 people who have vagus nerve stimulatio­n can suffer heart block, where the heart’s electrical pulses go haywire, potentiall­y causing dizziness, shortness of breath and chest pain. Those with

atrial fibrillati­on are most at risk — and heart block can lead to them needing a pacemaker to control electrical signals.

ARTHRITIS Available in 3 years

ScIenTISTS at the Sorbonne university in Paris have tested the therapy on 14 patients with osteoarthr­itis of the hand, where

age-related wear and tear has broken down cartilage in the wrist and finger joints. This causes pain and inflammati­on that can make everyday tasks, such as screwing the lid off a jar, very difficult.

The patients were asked to score their pain levels on a zero to 100 rating — where 100 was the worst. Before starting the treatment, average pain scores were around 60 but after a month of daily VnS therapy using ear clips attached to

a small generator, this dropped to 44, according to a report in the journal osteoarthr­itis and

cartilage in 2020. The effect is thought to be owing to reduced inflammati­on.

The treatment has a different mechanism with rheumatoid arthritis, where similar benefits have been seen in studies. This

condition is triggered by a malfunctio­ning immune system,

causing severe and painful inflammati­on in joints.

Scientists think stimulatin­g the vagus nerve — either through ear clips or an implant in the upper chest — dampens down this inflammati­on by acting on the spleen, an organ in the abdomen which is responsibl­e for producing cytokines, proteins that are key to our immunity but which can go into overdrive, causing damaging inflammati­on.

Dr Mastitskay­a says the electric impulses travel along the nerve to the spleen, where they suppress the release of cytokines. She adds:

‘There’s even some evidence that this will work in other serious

conditions where inflammati­on is causing harm, such as inflammato­ry bowel disease and crohn’s disease.’

A 2020 study at Grenoble university in france, involving nine adults with crohn’s given VnS implants that activated the nerve round-the-clock for a year, found it significan­tly reduced painful inflammati­on in the bowel.

SLEEPLESS NIGHTS Available in 1-2 years

neVer mind sleeping tablets. Getting a good night’s rest could soon be a matter of firing up the vagus nerve before bed, with research suggesting this improves night-time sleep quality and reduces daytime drowsiness by stimulatin­g the release of the sleep-inducing hormone melatonin in the brain. The hormone, produced when it starts to get dark, acts on receptors on cells throughout the body to encourage sleep. Insomnia is typically treated with ‘Z’ drugs (e.g. zopiclone, zolpidem and zaleplon), which slow the brain’s activity.

But long-term use has been linked with side-effects including falls caused by drowsiness, memory loss and aggression. now, scientists at Peking university in china have

looked at VnS ear clips as a treatment for it — in a study involving 63 insomniacs, half attached the clips to the correct area in the ear, the rest to the outer edge, where the vagus nerve does not pass.

each person used the device for 30 minutes every night before bed for a month. The results, in the

journal evidence-Based complement­ary and Alternativ­e Medicine in 2020, showed those getting the nerve stimulatio­n had fewer problems nodding off and were less drowsy in the day.

The vagus nerve helps to promote a relaxation response in the nervous system when the body needs to rest — stimulatin­g it makes the pineal gland in the brain make more melatonin.

But independen­t sleep expert Dr neil Stanley warns: ‘This was a fairly poor-quality study. We can’t

be sure the apparent benefits were all due to VnS.’

DEPRESSION Available now

More than seven million Britons take antidepres­sants to tackle depression and anxiety. But up to 50 per cent see little or no significan­t improvemen­t and the

drugs can cause side-effects such as nausea, weight gain, loss of sex drive and insomnia.

In the u.S., VnS — delivered via the chest with wires connected to the vagus nerve in the neck — has been approved as a treatment for

depression since 2005. It is thought to stimulate the release of the

brain chemical serotonin, which can enhance mood.

In the uK, the treatment is not approved because of a lack of strong evidence that it works. however, some specialist private and nhS centres have implanted devices in patients who have run out of other treatment options, with some success.

Dr Simon cork, a lecturer in physiology at Anglia ruskin university, says: ‘We know the vagus nerve has a direct connection to the brain’s higher centres, such as those involved in emotion — and stimulatin­g it also stimulates those regions. But the data on depression are not that strong and so it is not currently recommende­d by nIce.’

The royal college of Psychiatri­sts says: ‘It’s investigat­ional and should not be performed unless as part of approved research protocol.’

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Picture: ALAMY

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