Preventing Seizures
Brain pacemaker alleviates seizures in rats
Friday, November 3, 2000
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Duke University Medical Center researchers have discovered a
promising new way to alleviate epileptic seizures by stimulating a
facial nerve that extends into the brain, disrupting the cycle of
seizure activity. Their experiments in rats also involved testing
the concept of a "brain pacemaker," which could be reduced to a
small device that could detect potential seizure activity and
stimulate the nerve to prevent seizures in humans.Journal of
Neuroscience
In the paper, Associate Professor of Neurobiology Miguel Nicolelis
and colleagues Erika Fanselow and Ashlan Reid report that
stimulating one of the two trigeminal nerves in rats given a
seizure-producing drug could reduce those seizures up to 78
percent. Stimulation of both trigeminal nerves, which carry sensory
information from either side of the jaw into the brain, proved even
more effective.
"Such stimulation of the vagus nerve has proven somewhat useful in
stopping seizures, and in fact is now used in patients," Nicolelis
said. "However, since the vagus nerve is so powerful, controlling
the heart, lungs and other autonomic functions, such stimulation is
relatively risky, perhaps disrupting heart function, for example."
According to Nicolelis, the powerful effects of vagus nerve
stimulation also meant that only one vagus nerve, the one that does
not affect the heart, could be stimulated in attempts to reduce
seizures.
Thus, Nicolelis and his colleagues reasoned that the trigeminal
cranial nerve -- which seemed more benign because it innervates
only the face -- might prove a more effective route to preventing
seizures.
The scientists tested their theory by treating rats with a
seizure-producing drug and attempting to reduce or eliminate those
seizures through trigeminal nerve stimulation.
"We found that such stimulation clearly relieved seizures, which
was a big surprise because nobody had thought about it, even though
the basic understanding that stimulating cranial nerves affected
the brain has been available for 50 years," Nicolelis said.
The scientists' finding lends support to the theory that nerve
stimulation reduces seizures by activating a non-specific "arousal"
mechanism in the brain. Such non-specificity implies that any nerve
reaching into the appropriate brain regions can be stimulated to
disrupt synchrony.
The scientists also found that they could stimulate both trigeminal
nerves using a lower current and yet achieving even greater seizure
reduction. The ability to use lower voltages reduces the chance of
nerve damage or pain from nerve stimulation, said Nicolelis.
"When we found that such trigeminal nerve stimulation was so
successful, we believed that we could achieve even more effective
seizure prevention, as well as reduce the risk of nerve damage, by
stimulating only when a seizure appeared imminent," Nicolelis said.
In contrast, he said, current vagus nerve stimulation in humans is
manually operated, either on a fixed intermittent cycle, or by the
patient who is having a seizure or feeling one coming on.
Thus, the neurobiologists, working with Duke biomedical engineers,
developed and tested a system in the rats that would monitor their
brain wave patterns via brain electrodes and automatically activate
the trigeminal nerve stimulation only when the tell-tale patterns
marking a seizure appeared.
The seizure-related system proved almost 40 times more effective at
seizure reduction per second of stimulation than was periodic
stimulation not related to seizure activity, the scientists
said.
"These findings lead us to believe that we could develop a system
that would work like the brain equivalent of a heart pacemaker to
actually prevent seizures," Nicolelis said. "It could continuously
monitor brain wave patterns, using non-invasive EEG electrodes on
the person's scalp, in order to detect the well-known pathological
signature of seizures from a few seconds to a minute before they
start. Then, the system could stimulate the trigeminal nerves to
prevent the seizures."
Microchip technology could allow the EEG detection and
pattern-analysis circuitry to be reduced to a tiny size, said
Nicolelis, and he and his biomedical engineering colleagues are now
developing such microcircuitry. Also, he said, such pattern
analysis could be highly sophisticated, using multiple methods, or
algorithms, for recognizing pre-seizure brain wave patterns and
"voting" on whether a seizure was imminent. Using such multiple
methods could increase the accuracy of detection of pre-seizure
activity, Nicolelis said.
"We have now demonstrated for the first time the concept of
unsupervised seizure detection and seizure therapy systems in awake
animals," he said. "And the level of seizure reduction we have
achieved is above what the FDA has considered justifiable for the
vagus nerve implant that is already in clinical use. Thus, we
believe that the first clinical application of this technique could
be possible in about five years."
Besides developing the "neurochips" for such a brain pacemaker,
Nicolelis and his colleagues will also explore the ability of
trigeminal nerve stimulation to reduce or prevent a wide variety of
seizures. The scientists' work was supported by the Klingenstein
Foundation.