New Device Taps Brain Signals To Help Stroke Patients Regain Hand Function
The Food And Drug Administration has authorized a device called IpsiHand from the uninjured side of a patient`s brain to help rewire circuits controlling the hand, wrist and arm.
The device can be used at home and offers stroke patients "an additional treatment option to help them move their hands and arms again," said Dr. Christopher Loftus of the FDA`s Center for Devices and Radiological Health in a statement.
"We called 911 and off to the hospital I went," Forrest, who lives near St. Louis with his wife, Patti. "By the time I got there most of my right side was paralyzed."
Enlarge this image Mark Forrest is back fishing after rehabilitation with the IpsiHand device helped him regain use of his right hand. Mark Forrest
"I`m a die-hard fisherman," he says, "so that really hurt."
So he kept working with a physical therapist, month after month, until he got really frustrated.
Then Forrest began talking to people at a company called NeuroLutions. It was founded by Dr. Eric Leuthardt, a brain surgeon at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
"If you talk to a stroke patient, they can imagine moving their hand," he says. "They can try to move their hand. But they just can`t actually move it."
Usually, the brain and body follow what`s known as a contralateral model, where the right side of the brain controls the left side of the body. But Leuthardt`s team had discovered that control signals were also present on the ipsilateral side – the same side of the brain as the limb being controlled.
But a mechanical hand wasn`t Leuthardt`s ultimate goal. He wanted to help his patients regain the ability to move their hand without assistance. And that meant answering a question:
"If somebody can generate a brain signal that`s associated with their desire to move, and the robotic hand-piece moves it, so they`re getting feedback, can we use this device that controls their affected limb to essentially encourage the brain to rewire?"
"Then after six weeks of training, he can pick up that marble and he can move it on top of the shelf," Leuthardt says.
NeuroLutions tested the device on 40 patients for 12 weeks. All of them got better, and the results persuaded the FDA to authorize marketing of the device.
Now the company is gearing up to manufacture the system, says NeuroLutions CEO Leo Petrossian, a brain scientist with a business degree.
The IpsiHand system consists of a headset that analyzes brain signals, a tablet computer, and a robotic hand-piece worn over the wrist and hand. Unlike many rehabilitation aids, it can be used at home.
The conventional wisdom is that most recovery from a stroke takes place in the first 90 days or so, says Petrossian. "So if it`s day 100 and a person can`t move their arm very well, that`s how their arm`s going to be for the rest of their life."
"If you spend an hour a day doing this exercise of thinking and visualizing opening and closing the hand, five days a week for 12 weeks, you retrain a different part of the brain to drive that previously disabled appendage," Petrossian says.
"But with this he was making great strides," she says. "Like all of a sudden he could touch his index finger with his thumb."
"It didn`t," he says. "I built a really nice one and it`s got wheels on the bottom of it so it rolls in and out of the water."
"We sat and fished for five hours on that boat," he says. "And probably every other cast, we were catching fish."