• Researchers identify brain signals assoc

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Thu Dec 9 21:30:44 2021
    Researchers identify brain signals associated with OCD symptoms, paving
    way for adaptive treatment

    Date:
    December 9, 2021
    Source:
    Brown University
    Summary:
    The discovery of electrical signals in the brain associated with
    OCD could enable an emerging type of adaptive deep brain stimulation
    therapy as an improved treatment.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    In an effort to improve treatment for obsessive compulsive disorder, a
    team of researchers has for the first time recorded electrical signals
    in the human brain associated with ebbs and flows in OCD symptoms over
    an extended period in their homes as they went about daily living. The
    research could be an important step in making an emerging therapy called
    deep brain stimulation responsive to everyday changes in OCD symptoms.


    ==========================================================================
    OCD, which affects as much as 2% of the world's population, causes
    recurring unwanted thoughts and repetitive behaviors. The disorder
    is often debilitating, and up to 20-40% of cases don't respond to
    traditional drug or behavioral treatments. Deep brain stimulation, a
    technique that involves small electrodes precisely placed in the brain
    that deliver mild electrical pulses, is effective in treating over half
    of patients for whom other therapies failed. A limitation is that DBS is
    unable to adjust to moment-to-moment changes in OCD symptom, which are
    impacted by the physical and social environment . But adaptive DBS - -
    which can adjust the intensity of stimulation in response to real-time
    signals recorded in the brain -- could be more effective than traditional
    DBS and reduce unwanted side effects.

    "OCD is a disorder in which symptom severity is highly variable over time
    and can be elicited by triggers in the environment," said David Borton,
    an associate professor of biomedical engineering at Brown University,
    a biomedical engineer at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Center
    for Neurorestoration and Neurotechnology and a senior author of the
    new research. "A DBS system that can adjust stimulation intensity in
    response to symptoms may provide more relief and fewer side effects for patients. But in order to enable that technology, we must first identify
    the biomarkers in the brain associated with OCD symptoms, and that is
    what we are working to do in this study." The research, led by Nicole Provenza, a recent Brown biomedical engineering Ph.D. graduate from
    Borton's laboratory, was a collaboration between Borton's research group, affiliated with Brown's Carney Institute for Brain Science and School
    of Engineering; Dr. Wayne Goodman's and Dr. Sameer Sheth's research
    groups at Baylor College of Medicine; and Jeff Cohn from the University
    of Pittsburgh's Department of Psychology and Intelligent Systems Program
    and Carnegie Mellon University.

    For the study, Goodman's team recruited five participants with severe
    OCD who were eligible for DBS treatment. Sheth, lead neurosurgeon,
    implanted each participant with an investigational DBS device from
    Medtronic capable of both delivering stimulation and recording native electrical brain signals. Using the sensing capabilities of the hardware,
    the team gathered brain-signal data from participants in both clinical
    settings and at home as they went about daily activities.

    Along with the brain signal data, the team also collected a suite of
    behavioral biomarkers. In the clinical setting, these included facial expression and body movement. Using computer vision and machine learning,
    they discovered that the behavioral features were associated with
    changes in internal brain states. At home, they measured participants' self-reports of OCD symptom intensity as well as biometric data --
    heart rate and general activity levels -- recorded by a smart watch
    and paired smartphone application provided by Rune Labs. All of those behavioral measures were then time-synched to the brain-sensing data,
    enabling the researchers to look for correlations between the two.



    ========================================================================== "This is the first time brain signals from participants with
    neuropsychiatric illness have been recorded chronically at home alongside relevant behavioral measures," Provenza said. "Using these brain signals,
    we may be able to differentiate between when someone is experiencing OCD symptoms, and when they are not, and this technique made it possible
    to record this diversity of behavior and brain activity." Provenza's
    analysis of the data showed that the technique did pick out brain-
    signal patterns potentially linked to OCD symptom fluctuation. While more
    work needs to be done across a larger cohort, this initial study shows
    that this technique is a promising way forward in confirming candidate biomarkers of OCD.

    "We were able to collect a far richer dataset than has been collected
    before, and we found some tantalizing trends that we'd like to explore
    in a larger cohort of patients," Borton said. "Now we know that we
    have the toolset to nail down control signals that could be used to
    adjust stimulation level according to people's symptoms." Once those biomarkers are positively identified, they could then be used in an
    adaptive DBS system. Currently, DBS systems employ a constant level
    of stimulation, which can be adjusted by a clinician at clinical
    visits. Adaptive DBS systems, in contrast, would stimulate and record
    brain activity and behavior continuously without the need to come to
    the clinic. When the system detects signals associated with an increase
    in symptom severity, it could ramp up stimulation to potentially provide additional relief. Likewise, stimulation could be toned down when symptoms abate. Such a system could potentially improve DBS therapy while reducing
    side effects.

    "In addition to advancing DBS therapy for cases of severe and
    treatment resistant OCD, this study has the potential for improving
    our understanding of the underlying neurocircuitry of the disorder,"
    Goodman said. "This deepened understanding may allow us to identify new anatomic targets for treatment that may be amenable to novel interventions
    that are less invasive than DBS." Work on this line of research is
    ongoing. Because OCD is a complex disorder than manifests itself in
    highly variable ways across patients, the team hopes to expand the
    number of participants to capture more of that variability. They seek
    to identify a fuller set of OCD biomarkers that could be used to guide
    adaptive DBS systems. Once those biomarkers are in place, the team hopes
    to work with device-makers to implement their DBS devices.

    "Our goal is to understand what those brain recordings are telling us and
    to train the device to recognize certain patterns associated with specific symptoms," Sheth said. "The better we understand the neural signatures of health and disease, the greater our chances of using DBS to successfully
    treat challenging brain disorders like OCD." The research was supported
    by the National Institutes of Health's BRAIN Initiative (UH3NS100549
    and UH3NS103549), the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory Fellowship, the
    McNair Foundation, the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, the
    National Institutes of Health (1RF1MH121371, U54-HD083092, NIH MH096951, K01-MH-116364 and R21-NS-104953, 3R25MH101076-05S2, 1S10OD025181) and
    the Karen T. Romer Undergraduate Teaching and Research Award at Brown University.

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Brown_University. Note: Content may
    be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Nicole R. Provenza, Sameer A. Sheth, Evan M. Dastin-van Rijn,
    Raissa K.

    Mathura, Yaohan Ding, Gregory S. Vogt, Michelle Avendano-Ortega,
    Nithya Ramakrishnan, Noam Peled, Luiz Fernando Fracassi Gelin, David
    Xing, Laszlo A. Jeni, Itir Onal Ertugrul, Adriel Barrios-Anderson,
    Evan Matteson, Andrew D. Wiese, Junqian Xu, Ashwin Viswanathan,
    Matthew T.

    Harrison, Kelly R. Bijanki, Eric A. Storch, Jeffrey F. Cohn,
    Wayne K.

    Goodman, David A. Borton. Long-term ecological assessment of
    intracranial electrophysiology synchronized to behavioral markers
    in obsessive- compulsive disorder. Nature Medicine, 2021; DOI:
    10.1038/s41591-021- 01550-z ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/12/211209124247.htm

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