By Terri Moon Cronk
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, July 15, 2014 – The Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency is working to develop wireless, implantable brain prostheses
for service members and veterans who suffer memory loss from traumatic brain
injury.
Called neuroprotheses, the implant would help declarative
memory, which consciously recalls basic knowledge such as events, times and
places, DARPA officials said.
To overcome such memory deficits, “these neuroprosthetics
will be designed to bridge the gaps in the injured brain to help restore that
memory function,” said Dr. Justin Sanchez, DARPA Restoring Active Memory
Program manager. “Our vision is to develop neuroprosthetics for memory recovery
in patients living with brain injury and dysfunction,” he said.
The neuroprosthetics developed and tested over the next four
years would be as a wireless, fully implantable neural-interface medical device
for human clinical use, Sanchez explained.
Each year in the United States, traumatic brain injury
affects about 270,000 service members and another 1.7 million civilians, he
said.
“The traumatic brain injury is really a very devastating
injury,” said Dr. Geoffrey Ling, an Iraq and Afghanistan war veteran who worked
in both war zones studying TBI for former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Navy
Adm. Mike Mullen.
“One of the biggest consequences of [TBI memory loss] is the
ability to do normal functions,” Ling said. “How is somebody going to have
their livelihood if they can’t remember how to do simple tasks?”
DARPA’s neuroprostheses development is expected to yield
“remarkable” benefits for service members and for civilians throughout the
world, Ling noted. “But right now our focus here is on those injured service
members.”
In broad funding terms, the implant development would
involve assistance from the University of Pennsylvania, which has been selected
for an award of up to $22.5 million, a University of California, Los Angeles
team, with an award of $15 million, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,
with up to $2.5 million, Sanchez said.
The effects of traumatic brain injury are profound, Ling
said.
“[TBIs] typically result in a reduced ability or capacity to
form new memories or even to produce or recall memories,” Ling said, adding
that existing treatment options are “very few.”
In addition to extending available options for injuries and
treatment, Sanchez added, “ultimately, we would like to help find solutions for
the emotional, social and economic aspects of those injuries.”
Huge technological and scientific challenges need to be overcome
to deliver such medical therapies to injured service members and veterans, he
said. They include new medical hardware to interface with the brain and
computational models that allow clinicians to interface with the circuits of
the brain that produce memory formation and recall, he said.
While development of the implant encompasses four years,
Sanchez said, one of the goals is to start phasing in some early prototype
devices the first year and to collect preliminary data to help guide more
complex parts later in the project.
“This is a truly remarkable period of time,” Sanchez said.
“To think about how we are going to learn about memory in the human brain, to
think about the potential for developing those next generation medical
neuroprosthetic devices that can provide new options for our injured military
personnel, is truly remarkable.”
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