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Distributed brain co-processor for tracking spikes, seizures and behaviour during electrical brain stimulation

Authors :
Vladimir Sladky
Petr Nejedly
Filip Mivalt
Benjamin H Brinkmann
Inyong Kim
Erik K St. Louis
Nicholas M Gregg
Brian N Lundstrom
Chelsea M Crowe
Tal Pal Attia
Daniel Crepeau
Irena Balzekas
Victoria S Marks
Lydia P Wheeler
Jan Cimbalnik
Mark Cook
Radek Janca
Beverly K Sturges
Kent Leyde
Kai J Miller
Jamie J Van Gompel
Timothy Denison
Gregory A Worrell
Vaclav Kremen
Source :
Brain Commun, Brain communications, vol 4, iss 3
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022.

Abstract

Early implantable epilepsy therapy devices provided open-loop electrical stimulation without brain sensing, computing, or an interface for synchronized behavioural inputs from patients. Recent epilepsy stimulation devices provide brain sensing but have not yet developed analytics for accurately tracking and quantifying behaviour and seizures. Here we describe a distributed brain co-processor providing an intuitive bi-directional interface between patient, implanted neural stimulation and sensing device, and local and distributed computing resources. Automated analysis of continuous streaming electrophysiology is synchronized with patient reports using a handheld device and integrated with distributed cloud computing resources for quantifying seizures, interictal epileptiform spikes and patient symptoms during therapeutic electrical brain stimulation. The classification algorithms for interictal epileptiform spikes and seizures were developed and parameterized using long-term ambulatory data from nine humans and eight canines with epilepsy, and then implemented prospectively in out-of-sample testing in two pet canines and four humans with drug-resistant epilepsy living in their natural environments. Accurate seizure diaries are needed as the primary clinical outcome measure of epilepsy therapy and to guide brain-stimulation optimization. The brain co-processor system described here enables tracking interictal epileptiform spikes, seizures and correlation with patient behavioural reports. In the future, correlation of spikes and seizures with behaviour will allow more detailed investigation of the clinical impact of spikes and seizures on patients.

Details

ISSN :
26321297
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1bd0ab6e1c035f2374f9484ca3d3d6f4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcac115