Science Woman's severe depression successfully treated using 'pacemaker for the brain' - Zap to the Extreme!

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Scientists have successfully treated a person with severe depression using a surgically implanted device, a new study has suggested.

The device, which has been described as "the equivalent of a pacemaker for the brain", is able to tap into the specific brain circuit involved in depressive brain patterns and reset them.

Researchers believe the proof-of-concept study shows how brain activity could be used to deliver personalised treatment for neuropsychiatric disorders - including medical conditions that involve the mind and nervous system.

The team from the University of California San Francisco's (UCSF) Weill Institute for Neurosciences were able to use the instrument to deliver treatment to a patient with depression, named Sarah.

Sarah, who has been asked to be known only by her first name, has been using the implanted device over the last 15 months and the treatment's effect has continued to last.

For patients with long-term, treatment-resistant depression, that result could be transformative, researchers said.

"I was at the end of the line," said Sarah. "I was severely depressed. I could not see myself continuing if this was all I'd be able to do, if I could never move beyond this. It was not a life worth living."

"In the early few months, the lessening of the depression was so abrupt, and I wasn't sure if it would last," she said.

"But it has lasted. And I've come to realise that the device really augments the therapy and self-care I've learned while being a patient here at UCSF."

The first author of the study, Katherine Scangos, said: "We were able to deliver this customised treatment to a patient with depression, and it alleviated her symptoms.

"We haven't been able to do this kind of personalised therapy previously in psychiatry."

Ms Scangos said the immediate effect compared to the four to eight-week delay of standard treatment models.

Previous studies have shown limited success in treating depression using traditional deep brain stimulation (DBS).

However, what made the new trial successful was the discovery of a neural biomarker - a specific pattern of brain activity that indicates the onset of symptoms.

The group of scientists customised a new DBS device to respond only when it recognised that particular pattern.

However, scientists have said further research will be needed to determine if these results are generalisable to a broader population.

A statement from UCSF said: "UCSF Health physicians have successfully treated a patient with severe depression by tapping into the specific brain circuit involved in depressive brain patterns and resetting them using the equivalent of a pacemaker for the brain.

"The study, which appears in the Oct. 4, 2021, issue of Nature Medicine, represents a landmark success in the years-long effort to apply advances in neuroscience to the treatment of psychiatric disorders."

https://news.sky.com/story/womans-s...reated-using-pacemaker-for-the-brain-12426062
https://archive.md/xwIhY
 
So, basically a lobotomy but without the negative connotations?
 
So, basically a lobotomy but without the negative connotations?
This would be much more akin to ECT. I'd be very interested in knowing what her memory function is like in the long-term.
 
Wasn't that the documentary about the woman who drilled a hole in her head
 
This would be much more akin to ECT. I'd be very interested in knowing what her memory function is like in the long-term.
It's much more carefully targeted and controlled. Deep brain stimulation has been used to treat Parkinson's before, by artificially stimulating that region of the brain. This is a proof that a similar treatment can work with depression. What's new is finding where to zap, and being able to detect when to zap based on a detectable marker.
 
Will be interesting to see how it affects behaviour, when you can press a button to remove bad feefees it removes the incentive to improve
 
This seem like mind controlling devices but with extra steps

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You arent allowed to be miserable. If we want you to be happy, you WILL be happy...
 
Will be interesting to see how it affects behaviour, when you can press a button to remove bad feefees it removes the incentive to improve
There's a difference between feeling depressed and having a brain imbalance that gives you depression. When it's the latter, you already have no desire to improve.
 
Will be interesting to see how it affects behaviour, when you can press a button to remove bad feefees it removes the incentive to improve
That is so fucking retarded I can't believe you wrote this. Do you think people are motivated to improve when they feel like shit?

Let me put it a different way, do you feel motivated to do shit when you've got the flu, or do you want to do as little as possible because you're sick?
 
That is so fucking retarded I can't believe you wrote this. Do you think people are motivated to improve when they feel like shit?

Let me put it a different way, do you feel motivated to do shit when you've got the flu, or do you want to do as little as possible because you're sick?
More so than when they don't. Comparing it to an illness with physical side effects is retarded.

Part of the problem with classifying it as an illness is people will be less inclined to believe its because of their behaviour, and it just some magical brain fairy cursing them.

As you're an android I understand that you don't understand that feelings motivate people to action. Yes bad feelings can demotivate but if you feel bad all the time its an indicator to change shit up. Not continue binge watching netflix endlessly and whining on social media that someone else hasn't fixed all your problems.
 
What else do you call clinical depression? Is schizophrenia just a feeling now?
Are there any other physical markers other than mood hormones? Negatives can't be proven which is why the burden of proof is on the claimant.

Schizophrenia causes different behaviour. How many moods make you behave like a schizo? In order to prove depression is a disease, you have to actually differentiate it from sadness.
 
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