The Courier-Journal (Louisville)

Neuralink seeks people for clinical trial

Musk-founded company aims to implant brain chips into participan­ts

- Amaris Encinas and Mike Snider

The search for human participan­ts is on as Neuralink embarks on its first clinical trial.

Neuralink, a tech startup owned and co-founded by Elon Musk, received Food and Drug Administra­tion approval in May to implant brain chips into humans.

The company has also received approval from an Institutio­nal Review Board and has a hospital site in place to open participan­t recruitmen­t, according to a blog post by Neuralink.

The goal of the BCI, or brain-computer interface, is to grant people with paralysis the ability to control a computer cursor or keyboard using their thoughts alone.

Precise Roboticall­y Implanted Brain-Computer Interface, or PRIME, is a six-year study that aims to evaluate the safety of the implant and surgical robot in addition to the overall functional­ity of the brain-computer interface software.

Eligible participan­ts will have the R1 Robot surgically place the N1 Implant into a region of the brain that controls movement intention. After the N1 Implant has been surgically placed, it’s supposed to record and transmit brain signals wirelessly to an app that decodes movement intention.

“We are happy to announce that we’ve received approval from the reviewing independen­t institutio­nal review board and our first hospital site to begin recruitmen­t for our first-in-human clinical trial,” Neuralink wrote online.

Here’s what we know so far:

What will Neuralink’s study entail?

Participan­ts will be asked to use the N1 Implant and the N1 User App to control a computer and provide feedback about the system after the R1 Robot surgically places the implant, according to Neuralink.

How is the chip installed?

Neuralink has created a surgical robot, specially designed to embed the implant and its 64 ultrathin flexible connected threads upon which are 1,024 electrodes that record neural activity.

The robot has five built-in camera systems and uses optical coherence tomography for noninvasiv­e imaging of brain tissue. The robot uses a needle as thin as a human hair, which inserts the “threads exactly where they need to be,” Neuralink’s site says.

What does Neuralink chip do?

Neuralink’s goal with its human trials is to eventually enable a person with paralysis to use a computer or phone with their brain activity alone. The Neuralink 1 implant actually includes multiple chips, a wireless battery and other electronic­s hermetical­ly sealed within a device about the size of a large coin.

Several dozen ultrathin threads protrude from the implant; those go directly into the brain. Signals from the implant are sent via Bluetooth to, and decoded by, a braincompu­ter interface, which would allow a person to, for instance, control an onscreen cursor or move a robotic limb.

“The first thing that we’re going after is a wireless implanted chip that would enable someone who is a … tetraplegi­c or quadripleg­ic to control a computer, or mouse, or their phone, or really any device … just by thinking. This obviously would be a massive enabler, make life way easier for them. I’d say it’s like a Fitbit in your skull with tiny wires that go to your brain,” Musk said in an online chat in 2021.

Beyond helping paralyzed patients regain some mobility and communicat­e without typing, Neuralink’s longer-term goals include helping restore full mobility and sight.

What else should you know?

Neuralink’s study is expected to last a period of six years, with almost two dozen follow-up visits scheduled to monitor a participan­t’s progress and ensure the BCI is working as intended, according to Neuralink’s online brochure.

There will be a total of nine home and in-person clinic visits that will take place over the first year and a half, which is the time frame for the primary study.

Participan­ts will also be asked to participat­e in a minimum of two research sessions per week in one-hour increments over the duration of the study.

The company will provide follow-up care for the next 31⁄2 years with a total of 20 visits scheduled for participan­ts over that time period.

Study-related costs, like travel expenses intended to cover transporta­tion to and from the site, will be the only form of compensati­on participan­ts receive.

How can you sign up?

Neuralink has a few requiremen­ts in place to determine whether you may participat­e in the clinical trial.

They are looking for individual­s who:

Have quadripleg­ia with limited function in all four limbs due to spinal cord injury or amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS) and are at least one-year post-injury without improvemen­t.

Are at least 22 years old.

Have a consistent and reliable caregiver.

Individual­s who have an active implanted device like a pacemaker or deep brain stimulator (DBS), have a history of seizures, require MRIs for an ongoing medical condition, or are receiving transcrani­al magnetic stimulatio­n (TMS) treatment will not be able to participat­e in the study.

Those who are interested in participat­ing in the study should fill out an applicatio­n on Neuralink’s website.

“The first thing that we’re going after is a wireless implanted chip that would enable someone who ... to control a computer, or mouse, or their phone, or really any device … just by thinking . ... I’d say it’s like a Fitbit in your skull with tiny wires that go to your brain.” Elon Musk In a 2021 online chat

 ?? PROVIDED BY BUZZ60 ?? Elon Musk announced his company Neuralink plans to link human brains to computers, with the goal of helping paralyzed patients regain mobility and the ability to communicat­e without typing.
PROVIDED BY BUZZ60 Elon Musk announced his company Neuralink plans to link human brains to computers, with the goal of helping paralyzed patients regain mobility and the ability to communicat­e without typing.

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