Multi-disease Deep Brain Stimulation

Author: Mahboubeh Parastarfeizabadi1, Roy V Sillitoe2, Abbas Z Kouzani1
Affiliation:
1 School of Engineering, Deakin University, Geelong, VIC 3216, Australia.
2 Department of Pathology and Immunology, Department of Neuroscience, Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute, and Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children's Hospital, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Conference/Journal: IEEE Access
Date published: 2021 Jan 5
Other: Volume ID: 8 , Pages: 216933-216947 , Special Notes: doi: 10.1109/access.2020.3041942. , Word Count: 296


Current closed-loop deep brain stimulation (DBS) devices can generally tackle one disorder. This paper presents the design and evaluation of a multi-disease closed-loop DBS device that can sense multiple brain biomarkers, detect a disorder, and adaptively deliver electrical stimulation pulses based on the disease state. The device consists of: (i) a neural sensor, (ii) a controller involving a feature extractor, a disease classifier, and a control strategy, and (iii) neural stimulator. The neural sensor records and processes local field potentials and spikes from within the brain using two low-frequency and high-frequency channels. The feature extractor digitally processes the output of the neural sensor, and extracts five potential biomarkers: alpha, beta, slow gamma, high-frequency oscillations, and spikes. The disease classifier identifies the type of the neurological disorder through an analysis of the biomarkers' amplitude features. The control strategy considers the disease state and supplies the stimulation settings to the neural stimulator. Both the disease classifier and control strategy are based on fuzzy algorithms. The neural stimulator generates electrical stimulation pulses according to the control commands, and delivers them to the target area of the brain. The device can generate current stimulation pulses with specific amplitude, frequency, and duration. The fabricated device has the maximum radius of 15 mm. Its total weight including the circuit board, battery and battery holder is 5.1 g. The performance of the integrated device has been evaluated through six bench and in-vitro experiments. The experimental results are presented, analyzed, and discussed. Six bench and in-vitro experiments were conducted using sinusoidal, normal pre-recorded, and diseased neural signals representing normal, epilepsy, depression and PD conditions. The results obtained through these tests indicate the successful neural sensing, classification, control, and neural stimulating performance.

Keywords: Biomarkers; Closed-loop; Deep Brain Stimulation; Fuzzy Logic; Multiple Diseases.

PMID: 33381359 PMCID: PMC7771650 DOI: 10.1109/access.2020.3041942

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