RESUMEN
A visual cortical prosthesis (VCP) has long been proposed as a strategy for restoring useful vision to the blind, under the assumption that visual percepts of small spots of light produced with electrical stimulation of visual cortex (phosphenes) will combine into coherent percepts of visual forms, like pixels on a video screen. We tested an alternative strategy in which shapes were traced on the surface of visual cortex by stimulating electrodes in dynamic sequence. In both sighted and blind participants, dynamic stimulation enabled accurate recognition of letter shapes predicted by the brain's spatial map of the visual world. Forms were presented and recognized rapidly by blind participants, up to 86 forms per minute. These findings demonstrate that a brain prosthetic can produce coherent percepts of visual forms.
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Ceguera/fisiopatología , Visión Ocular/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Adulto , Estimulación Eléctrica/métodos , Electrodos , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Fosfenos , Corteza Visual/metabolismo , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Prótesis VisualesRESUMEN
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Recent advances in stereotactic and functional neurosurgery have brought forth the stereo-electroencephalography approach which allows deeper interrogation and characterization of the contributions of deep structures to neural and affective functioning. We argue that this approach can and should be brought to bear on the notoriously intractable issue of defining the pathophysiology of refractory psychiatric disorders and developing patient-specific optimized stimulation therapies. METHODS: We have developed a suite of methods for maximally leveraging the stereo-electroencephalography approach for an innovative application to understand affective disorders, with high translatability across the broader range of refractory neuropsychiatric conditions. RESULTS: This article provides a roadmap for determining desired electrode coverage, tracking high-resolution research recordings across a large number of electrodes, synchronizing intracranial signals with ongoing research tasks and other data streams, applying intracranial stimulation during recording, and design choices for patient comfort and safety. CONCLUSION: These methods can be implemented across other neuropsychiatric conditions needing intensive electrophysiological characterization to define biomarkers and more effectively guide therapeutic decision-making in cases of severe and treatment-refractory disease.
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Electroencefalografía , Trastornos Mentales , Técnicas Estereotáxicas , Humanos , Trastornos Mentales/terapia , Trastornos Mentales/fisiopatología , Electroencefalografía/métodos , Estimulación Encefálica Profunda/métodos , Monitorización Neurofisiológica/métodosRESUMEN
The rewards that we get from our choices and actions can have a major influence on our future behavior. Understanding how reward biasing of behavior is implemented in the brain is important for many reasons, including the fact that diminution in reward biasing is a hallmark of clinical depression. We hypothesized that reward biasing is mediated by the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), a cortical hub region associated with the integration of reward and executive control and with the etiology of depression. To test this hypothesis, we recorded neural activity during a biased judgment task in patients undergoing intracranial monitoring for either epilepsy or major depressive disorder. We found that beta (12-30 Hz) oscillations in the ACC predicted both associated reward and the size of the choice bias, and also tracked reward receipt, thereby predicting bias on future trials. We found reduced magnitude of bias in depressed patients, in whom the beta-specific effects were correspondingly reduced. Our findings suggest that ACC beta oscillations may orchestrate the learning of reward information to guide adaptive choice, and, more broadly, suggest a potential biomarker for anhedonia and point to future development of interventions to enhance reward impact for therapeutic benefit.
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Trastorno Depresivo Mayor , Giro del Cíngulo , Recompensa , Humanos , Giro del Cíngulo/fisiología , Giro del Cíngulo/diagnóstico por imagen , Giro del Cíngulo/fisiopatología , Masculino , Adulto , Femenino , Trastorno Depresivo Mayor/fisiopatología , Trastorno Depresivo Mayor/psicología , Conducta de Elección/fisiología , Persona de Mediana Edad , Ritmo beta/fisiología , Epilepsia/fisiopatología , Adulto JovenRESUMEN
Minimally invasive, high-bandwidth brain-computer-interface (BCI) devices can revolutionize human applications. With orders-of-magnitude improvements in volumetric efficiency over other BCI technologies, we developed a 50-µm-thick, mechanically flexible micro-electrocorticography (µECoG) BCI, integrating 256×256 electrodes, signal processing, data telemetry, and wireless powering on a single complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) substrate containing 65,536 recording and 16,384 stimulation channels, from which we can simultaneously record up to 1024 channels at a given time. Fully implanted below the dura, our chip is wirelessly powered, communicating bi-directionally with an external relay station outside the body. We demonstrated chronic, reliable recordings for up to two weeks in pigs and up to two months in behaving non-human primates from somatosensory, motor, and visual cortices, decoding brain signals at high spatiotemporal resolution.
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Prefrontal circuits in the human brain play an important role in cognitive and affective processing. Neuromodulation therapies delivered to certain key hubs within these circuits are being used with increasing frequency to treat a host of neuropsychiatric disorders. However, the detailed neurophysiological effects of stimulation to these hubs are largely unknown. Here, we performed intracranial recordings across prefrontal networks while delivering electrical stimulation to two well-established white matter hubs involved in cognitive regulation and depression: the subcallosal cingulate (SCC) and ventral capsule/ventral striatum (VC/VS). We demonstrate a shared frontotemporal circuit consisting of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, amygdala, and lateral orbitofrontal cortex where gamma oscillations are differentially modulated by stimulation target. Additionally, we found participant-specific responses to stimulation in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and demonstrate the capacity for further tuning of neural activity using current-steered stimulation. Our findings indicate a potential neurophysiological mechanism for the dissociable therapeutic effects seen across the SCC and VC/VS targets for psychiatric neuromodulation and our results lay the groundwork for personalized, network-guided neurostimulation therapy.
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BACKGROUND: Disorders of mood and cognition are prevalent, disabling, and notoriously difficult to treat. Fueling this challenge in treatment is a significant gap in our understanding of their neurophysiological basis. METHODS: We recorded high-density neural activity from intracranial electrodes implanted in depression-relevant prefrontal cortical regions in 3 human subjects with severe depression. Neural recordings were labeled with depression severity scores across a wide dynamic range using an adaptive assessment that allowed sampling with a temporal frequency greater than that possible with typical rating scales. We modeled these data using regularized regression techniques with region selection to decode depression severity from the prefrontal recordings. RESULTS: Across prefrontal regions, we found that reduced depression severity is associated with decreased low-frequency neural activity and increased high-frequency activity. When constraining our model to decode using a single region, spectral changes in the anterior cingulate cortex best predicted depression severity in all 3 subjects. Relaxing this constraint revealed unique, individual-specific sets of spatiospectral features predictive of symptom severity, reflecting the heterogeneous nature of depression. CONCLUSIONS: The ability to decode depression severity from neural activity increases our fundamental understanding of how depression manifests in the human brain and provides a target neural signature for personalized neuromodulation therapies.
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Encéfalo , Depresión , Humanos , Encéfalo/fisiología , Corteza Prefrontal , Mapeo Encefálico/métodos , Giro del CínguloRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Deep brain stimulation (DBS) and other neuromodulatory techniques are being increasingly utilized to treat refractory neurologic and psychiatric disorders. OBJECTIVE: /Hypothesis: To better understand the circuit-level pathophysiology of treatment-resistant depression (TRD) and treat the network-level dysfunction inherent to this challenging disorder, we adopted an approach of inpatient intracranial monitoring borrowed from the epilepsy surgery field. METHODS: We implanted 3 patients with 4 DBS leads (bilateral pair in both the ventral capsule/ventral striatum and subcallosal cingulate) and 10 stereo-electroencephalography (sEEG) electrodes targeting depression-relevant network regions. For surgical planning, we used an interactive, holographic visualization platform to appreciate the 3D anatomy and connectivity. In the initial surgery, we placed the DBS leads and sEEG electrodes using robotic stereotaxy. Subjects were then admitted to an inpatient monitoring unit for depression-specific neurophysiological assessments. Following these investigations, subjects returned to the OR to remove the sEEG electrodes and internalize the DBS leads to implanted pulse generators. RESULTS: Intraoperative testing revealed positive valence responses in all 3 subjects that helped verify targeting. Given the importance of the network-based hypotheses we were testing, we required accurate adherence to the surgical plan (to engage DBS and sEEG targets) and stability of DBS lead rotational position (to ensure that stimulation field estimates of the directional leads used during inpatient monitoring were relevant chronically), both of which we confirmed (mean radial error 1.2±0.9 mm; mean rotation 3.6±2.6°). CONCLUSION: This novel hybrid sEEG-DBS approach allows detailed study of the neurophysiological substrates of complex neuropsychiatric disorders.
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Estimulación Encefálica Profunda , Trastorno Depresivo Resistente al Tratamiento , Epilepsia , Humanos , Epilepsia/terapia , Electroencefalografía/métodos , Trastorno Depresivo Resistente al Tratamiento/terapia , Electrodos , Estimulación Encefálica Profunda/métodos , Electrodos ImplantadosRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Direct electrical stimulation of early visual cortex evokes the perception of small spots of light known as phosphenes. Previous studies have examined the location, size, and brightness of phosphenes evoked by stimulation of single electrodes. While it has been envisioned that concurrent stimulation of many electrodes could be used as the basis for a visual cortical prosthesis, the percepts resulting from multi-electrode stimulation have not been fully characterized. OBJECTIVE: To understand the rules governing perception of phosphenes evoked by multi-electrode stimulation of visual cortex. METHODS: Multi-electrode stimulation was conducted in human epilepsy patients. We examined the number and spatial arrangement of phosphenes evoked by stimulation of individual multi-electrode groups (nâ¯=â¯8), and the ability of subjects to discriminate between the pattern of phosphenes generated by stimulation of different multi-electrode groups (nâ¯=â¯7). RESULTS: Simultaneous stimulation of pairs of electrodes separated by greater than 4â¯mm tended to produce perception of two distinct phosphenes. Simultaneous stimulation of three electrodes gave rise to a consistent spatial pattern of phosphenes, but with significant variation in the absolute location, size, and orientation of that pattern perceived on each trial. Although multi-electrode stimulation did not produce perception of recognizable forms, subjects could use the pattern of phosphenes evoked by stimulation to perform simple discriminations. CONCLUSIONS: The number of phosphenes produced by multi-electrode stimulation can be predicted using a model for spread of activity in early visual cortex, but there are additional subtle effects that must be accounted for.
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Corteza Visual , Estimulación Eléctrica , Electrodos , Humanos , Fosfenos , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiologíaRESUMEN
Objective.Therapeutic efficacy of deep brain stimulation (DBS) in both established and emerging indications, is highly dependent on accurate lead placement and optimized clinical programming. The latter relies on clinicians' experience to search among available sets of stimulation parameters and can be limited by the time constraints of clinical practice. Recent innovations in device technology have expanded the number of possible electrode configurations and parameter sets available to clinicians, amplifying the challenge of time constraints. We hypothesize that patient specific neuroimaging data can effectively assist the clinical programming using automated algorithms.Approach.This paper introduces the DBS Illumina 3D algorithm as a tool which uses patient-specific imaging to find stimulation settings that optimizes activating a target area while minimizing the stimulation of areas outside the target that could result in unknown or undesired side effects. This approach utilizes preoperative neuroimaging data paired with the postoperative reconstruction of the lead trajectory to search the available stimulation space and identify optimized stimulation parameters. We describe the application of this algorithm in three patients with treatment-resistant depression who underwent bilateral implantation of DBS in subcallosal cingulate cortex and ventral capsule/ventral striatum using tractography optimized targeting with an imaging defined target previously described.Main results.Compared to the stimulation settings selected by the clinicians (informed by anatomy), stimulation settings produced by the algorithm that achieved similar or greater target coverage, produced a significantly smaller stimulation area that spilled outside the target (P= 0.002).Significance. The DBS Illumina 3D algorithm is seamlessly integrated with the clinician programmer software and effectively and rapidly assists clinicians with the analysis of image based anatomy, and provides a starting point to search the highly complex stimulation parameter space and arrive at the stimulation settings that optimize activating a target area.
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Estimulación Encefálica Profunda , Algoritmos , Estimulación Encefálica Profunda/métodos , Humanos , Neuroimagen , Programas InformáticosRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Visual cortical prostheses (VCP) could potentially benefit a majority of the blind population. Feasibility testing of these VCP opens new avenues to characterize stimulation of visual cortex in blind subjects. OBJECTIVE/HYPOTHESIS: To determine if sequential stimulation of visual cortex produces a perception bias in phosphene brightness. METHODS: We stimulated three blind subjects implanted with the Orion array with sequences of two and three electrodes and asked them to determine the brighter phosphene, using interval forced-choice paradigms. We selected a set of reference electrodes as the constant stimuli across sequences and compared across three different amplitude levels keeping all other stimulation parameters fixed across electrodes. RESULTS: For two subjects, we measured a significant increase in the probability of perceiving a lower-level amplitude just as bright or brighter than a higher-level amplitude when stimulated later in the sequence (p < 0.001, Wilcoxon rank sum test). The probability of reference electrodes selected as brighter was also higher during the second phase, across most amplitude comparisons. For the third subject, there were measurable but not significant changes, where the first stimuli were perceived as brighter. The effects were consistent within subjects in the three-electrode sequences, where the probability of the reference electrode selected as brighter was correlated to when it was presented in the sequence. CONCLUSIONS: We showed evidence of temporal interactions in non-overlapping sequences of electrodes, where the direction of the effect was subject specific but consistent across a variety of electrode locations and current amplitude levels.
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Fosfenos , Corteza Visual , Estimulación Eléctrica , Electrodos Implantados , Humanos , Estimulación Luminosa , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiologíaRESUMEN
The success of deep brain stimulation (DBS) for treating Parkinson's disease has led to its application to several other disorders, including treatment-resistant depression. Results with DBS for treatment-resistant depression have been heterogeneous, with inconsistencies largely driven by incomplete understanding of the brain networks regulating mood, especially on an individual basis. We report results from the first subject treated with DBS for treatment-resistant depression using an approach that incorporates intracranial recordings to personalize understanding of network behavior and its response to stimulation. These recordings enabled calculation of individually optimized DBS stimulation parameters using a novel inverse solution approach. In the ensuing double-blind, randomized phase incorporating these bespoke parameter sets, DBS led to remission of symptoms and dramatic improvement in quality of life. Results from this initial case demonstrate the feasibility of this personalized platform, which may be used to improve surgical neuromodulation for a vast array of neurologic and psychiatric disorders.
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Estimulación Encefálica Profunda , Trastorno Depresivo Resistente al Tratamiento , Enfermedad de Parkinson , Estimulación Encefálica Profunda/métodos , Depresión/terapia , Trastorno Depresivo Resistente al Tratamiento/terapia , Método Doble Ciego , Humanos , Enfermedad de Parkinson/terapia , Calidad de VidaRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: The efficacy of psychiatric DBS is thought to be driven by the connectivity of stimulation targets with mood-relevant fronto-temporal networks, which is typically evaluated using diffusion-weighted tractography. OBJECTIVE: Leverage intracranial electrophysiology recordings to better predict the circuit-wide effects of neuromodulation to white matter targets. We hypothesize strong convergence between tractography-predicted structural connectivity and stimulation-induced electrophysiological responses. METHODS: Evoked potentials were elicited by single-pulse stimulation to two common DBS targets for treatment-resistant depression - the subcallosal cingulate (SCC) and ventral capsule/ventral striatum (VCVS) - in two patients undergoing DBS with stereo-electroencephalographic (sEEG) monitoring. Evoked potentials were compared with predicted structural connectivity between DBS leads and sEEG contacts using probabilistic, patient-specific diffusion-weighted tractography. RESULTS: Evoked potentials and tractography showed strong convergence in both patients in orbitofrontal, ventromedial prefrontal, and lateral prefrontal cortices for both SCC and VCVS stimulation targets. Low convergence was found in anterior cingulate (ACC), where tractography predicted structural connectivity from SCC targets but produced no evoked potentials during SCC stimulation. Further, tractography predicted no connectivity to ACC from VCVS targets, but VCVS stimulation produced robust evoked potentials. CONCLUSION: The two connectivity methods showed significant convergence, but important differences emerged with respect to the ability of tractography to predict electrophysiological connectivity between SCC and VCVS to regions of the mood-related network. This multimodal approach raises intriguing implications for the use of tractography in surgical targeting and provides new data to enhance our understanding of the network-wide effects of neuromodulation.
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Estimulación Encefálica Profunda , Trastorno Depresivo Resistente al Tratamiento , Sustancia Blanca , Estimulación Encefálica Profunda/métodos , Trastorno Depresivo Resistente al Tratamiento/terapia , Imagen de Difusión Tensora/métodos , Giro del Cíngulo/fisiología , Humanos , Sustancia Blanca/fisiologíaRESUMEN
In this issue of the JCI, the dream of restoring useful vision to blind individuals with neurotechnology moves one step closer to realization. Fernández et al. implanted an electrode array with 96 penetrating electrodes in the visual cortex of a blind patient who had been without light perception for 16 years due to optic neuropathy. Remarkably, the patient was able to perceive visual patterns created by passing current through array electrodes. The use of a penetrating electrode array meant that action potentials from single neurons could be recorded to study the neural response to stimulation. Compared with electrodes resting on the cortical surface, penetrating electrodes require one-tenth the current to create a visual percept. However, patterned electrical stimulation often fails to produce the expected percept for penetrating and surface electrode arrays, highlighting the need for further research to untangle the relationship between stimulus and perception.
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Corteza Visual , Prótesis Visuales , Estimulación Eléctrica , Electrodos Implantados , Humanos , Nervio ÓpticoRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Visual cortical prostheses (VCPs) have the potential to restore visual function to patients with acquired blindness. Successful implementation of VCPs requires the ability to reliably map the location of the phosphene produced by stimulation of each implanted electrode. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy of different approaches to phosphene mapping and propose simple improvements to mapping strategy. METHODS: We stimulated electrodes implanted in the visual cortex of five blind and fifteen sighted patients. We tested two fixation strategies, unimanual fixation, where subjects placed a single index finger on a tactile fixation point and bimanual fixation, where subjects overlaid their right index finger over their left on the tactile point. In addition, we compared absolute mapping in which a single electrode was stimulated on each trial, and relative mapping with sequences containing stimulation of three to five phosphenes on each trial. Trial-to-trial variability present in relative mapping sequences was quantified. RESULTS: Phosphene mapping was less precise in blind subjects than in sighted subjects (2DRMS, 16 ± 2.9° vs. 1.9 ± 0.93°; t (18) = 18, p = <0.001). Within blind subjects, bimanual fixation resulted in more consistent phosphene localization than unimanual fixation (BS1: 4.0 ± 2.6° vs. 19 ± 4.7°, t (79) = 24, p < 0.001; BS2 4.1 ± 2.0° vs. 12 ± 2.7°, t (65) = 19, p < 0.001). Multi-point relative mapping had similar baseline precision to absolute mapping (BS1: 4.7 ± 2.6° vs. 3.9 ± 2.0°; BS2: 4.1 ± 2.0° vs. 3.2 ± 1.1°) but improved significantly when trial-to-trial translational variability was removed. Although multi-point mapping methods did reveal more of the functional organization expected in early visual cortex, subjects tended to artificially regularize the spacing between phosphenes. We attempt to address this issue by fitting a standard logarithmic map to relative multi-point sequences. CONCLUSIONS: Relative mapping methods, combined with bimanual fixation, resulted in the most precise estimates of phosphene organization. These techniques, combined with use of a standard logarithmic model of visual cortex, may provide a practical way to improve the implementation of a VCP.
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Fosfenos , Corteza Visual , Ceguera/terapia , Estimulación Eléctrica , Electrodos Implantados , HumanosRESUMEN
Advances in therapeutic neuromodulation devices have enabled concurrent stimulation and electrophysiology in the central nervous system. However, stimulation artifacts often obscure the sensed underlying neural activity. Here, we develop a method, termed Period-based Artifact Reconstruction and Removal Method (PARRM), to remove stimulation artifacts from neural recordings by leveraging the exact period of stimulation to construct and subtract a high-fidelity template of the artifact. Benchtop saline experiments, computational simulations, five unique in vivo paradigms across animal and human studies, and an obscured movement biomarker are used for validation. Performance is found to exceed that of state-of-the-art filters in recovering complex signals without introducing contamination. PARRM has several advantages: (1) it is superior in signal recovery; (2) it is easily adaptable to several neurostimulation paradigms; and (3) it has low complexity for future on-device implementation. Real-time artifact removal via PARRM will enable unbiased exploration and detection of neural biomarkers to enhance efficacy of closed-loop therapies.
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Artefactos , Procesamiento de Señales Asistido por Computador , Animales , Humanos , Encéfalo/fisiología , Sistema Nervioso Central , BiomarcadoresRESUMEN
OBJECTIVE: Brain-Machine Interfaces (BMIs) hold great promises for advancing neuroprosthetics, robotics, and for providing treatment options for severe neurological diseases. The objective of this work is the development and in vivo evaluation of electrodes for BMIs that meet the needs to record brain activity at sub-millimeter resolution over a large area of the cortex while being soft and electromechanically robust (i.e. stretchable). APPROACH: Current electrodes require a trade-off between high spatiotemporal resolution and cortical coverage area. To address the needs for simultaneous high resolution and large cortical coverage, the prototype electrode array developed in this study employs a novel bilayer routing of soft and stretchable lead wires from the recording sites on the surface of the brain (electrocorticography, ECoG) to the data acquisition system. MAIN RESULTS: To validate the recording characteristics, the array was implanted in healthy felines for up to 5 months. Neural signals recorded from both layers of the device showed elevated mid-frequency structures typical of local field potential (LFP) signals that were stable in amplitude over implant duration, and also exhibited consistent frequency-dependent modulation after anesthesia induction by Telazol. SIGNIFICANCE: The successful development of a soft and stretchable large-area, high resolution micro ECoG electrode array (lahrµECoG) is an important step to meet the neurotechnological needs of advanced BMI applications.