Tiny brain chip implant could help curb epileptic fits by detecting the ‘electrical storm’ that occurs before seizures start

An electronic chip implanted in the brain could help to prevent epileptic fits, a study suggests.

The device, so far tested only in mice, can detect the ‘electric storm’ that occurs in the brain when a seizure starts and release a natural chemical to stop it, according to Daily Mail.

The chip, made from plastic and twice as thick as a human hair, could be scaled up and trialled in people within two years

Around 600,000 people have epilepsy and three in ten are unable to control their seizures as anti-epileptic drugs do not work for them.

 The chip used in the research, led by the electrical engineering division at the University of Cambridge, detects the brain signal created when a fit begins. 

It then triggers a tiny pump that releases a brain chemical called GABA to stop the cells that cause a seizure from firing properly.

It was found to work in 17 mice. 

Stopping a seizure required less than 1 per cent of the chemical loaded into the device, suggesting it could operate for long periods without needing to be refilled.

The study authors, stress that the device is several years away from routine use in humans.

N.H.Kh

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