Deeply affected: Patients with severe depression may find relief with the help of a wired helmet (above). A magnetic field generated by the helmet harmlessly induces electric currents deep in the brain, giving underactive neurons a much-needed jump start.
Brainsway

Biomedicine

A Gentler Way to Jump-Start the Brain

Scientists in Israel are testing a noninvasive method to electrically stimulate neurons deep in the brain.

  • Monday, May 19, 2008
  • By Jennifer Chu

Electrically shocking the brain is often the only recourse for people suffering from severe, untreatable depression. While standard antidepressants have little effect on these patients, electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) can sometimes jump-start the brain, lifting people out of depression, at least for a while. But ECT can also carry some serious side effects, including seizures and memory loss.

Now researchers are exploring a gentler approach to electrically stimulating the brain. The technique, called transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), uses an external magnetic field to create electric currents within the brain. Until recently, researchers experimenting with TMS have only been able to stimulate superficial brain regions. Now a company in Israel called Brainsway has developed a TMS method that reaches deeper into the brain, to stimulate areas associated with depression and other neurological disorders. If successful, the therapy could provide a new alternative for the two-thirds of patients with major depression who fail to respond to antidepressants.

Brainsway's technology builds on traditional TMS methods, which involve placing an electromagnetic coil close to a patient's scalp. An external power source generates an electric current, which flows through the coil, which in turn creates a powerful magnetic field that travels through the skull, into the brain. Once in the brain, these electromagnetic waves generate electric current, stimulating nearby neurons, which then activate related networks, potentially strengthening connections within the brain.

However, a major limitation in TMS research has to do with the very nature of magnetic fields: electromagnetic waves decay rapidly after a short distance. This constraint has largely limited TMS's reach to brain areas one centimeter below the skull. In order to reach deeper regions, researchers would have to increase the intensity of the electric current flowing through the coil, which could induce painful side effects such as seizures and tissue damage.

Advertisement

Instead, Abraham Zangen, one of two inventors of Brainsway's deep TMS approach, and his colleagues designed a new coil configuration that is able to excite neurons at a depth of four centimeters, using the same intensity of current used in standard TMS coils. Instead of a single coil generating a single magnetic field through the brain, Zangen has outfitted a helmet with a number of small coils, each producing a separate magnetic field. As researchers run a standard current through the helmet, the coils, which are connected in a series, produce multiple fields that add up, generating a much stronger magnetic field that goes deeper into the brain before dropping off.

Zangen and his team have tested the helmet on a group of 50 people with severe depression, all of whom showed no improvement after taking antidepressants. During the double-blind clinical trial, half of the patients underwent deep TMS treatment at electrical intensities comparable to standard TMS for five days a week for four weeks, while the other half underwent similar treatments at lower intensities. Each treatment lasted about 20 minutes, during which patients wore the helmet while researchers periodically administered two-second electrical pulses. After the experiment, 50 percent of the patients who received the higher-intensity version reported significant improvements in sleep, appetite, and overall mood, while none of the others did. Most patients in the higher-intensity group also performed better on a standard cognitive test evaluating depression.

Print

Related Articles

Two Devices Treat Alzheimer's

Companies hope that brain stimulation will work where drugs have failed.

Implanted Sensor Could Provide Clues to Brain Chemistry

A system to detect brain chemicals may improve therapies for Parkinson's and other disorders.

Want to Enhance Your Brain Power?

Research hints that electrically stimulating the brain can speed learning.

Close Comments

To comment, please sign in or register

Forgot my password

tate0774

4 Comments

  • 1366 Days Ago
  • 05/19/2008

Transcranial stimulation

This subject has been actively studied in Finland for some 5 years in Helsinki University Central Hospital and Helsinki University of Technology.

The head of the research group, Ph.D Risto Ilmoniemi owns several patents on the methods and equipment. For further information, anybody interested may contact: http://www.biomag.hus.fi/ilmoniemi.html

Taisto Leinonen, M.Sc.(electronics)
Helsinki, Finland


Reply

Abolitionist2

1 Comment

  • 1365 Days Ago
  • 05/20/2008

Deep TMS is considerably different from normal TMS that BioMag is studying. It has promise to prove to be 'infinitely' more powerful not only to people with disorders but possibly also to healthy people. The Abolitionist Society thinks magnetic stimulation will be one of the key technologies in reducing suffering.

Reply

karlengblom

4 Comments

  • 1365 Days Ago
  • 05/20/2008

targeting parts of the brain

An interesting article by David Dobbs in NYTimes from two years ago:
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/02/magazine/02depression.html?scp=13&sq=%22deep+brain+stimulation%22&st=nyt
Apparently, there is a pea-sized part of the brain called area 25, which seems to malfunction in some severely depressed people. People interviewed in the article tried using electrodes to stimulate the area and were very successful, but using surgery for stimulation is too complex to become widespread. If the same thing can be accomplished without surgery, this could be very useful.

Reply

Advertisement

MAGAZINE

Can We Build Tomorrow's Breakthroughs?

Manufacturing in the United States is in trouble. That's bad news not just for the country's economy but for the future of innovation.

Videos

The Virtual Nurse Will See You Now

More

Advertisement

Technology Review Lists

TR50

Our list of the 50 most innovative companies, including the following:

American Superconductor

ARM Holdings

Claros Diagnostics

Groupon

More

Advertisement

Facebook

Advertisement