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Other brain stimulation techniques used to treat depression include Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) and Cranial electrotherapy stimulation (CES). Deep brain stimulation is currently under study as a treatment for depression. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is under study as a therapy for both depression and epilepsy.
Trigeminal Nerve Stimulation (TNS) is being researched at UCLA as a treatment for epilepsy.
The value of the FDA’s MAUDE database as an early warning system is undermined by two key problems: underreporting of the numerator (the number of adverse events), and the lack of a denominator (the total number of exposures). One cause of underreporting is that manufacturers do not have to report serious adverse events, including deaths, if they decide that the event is not related to the device. Jerome Hoffman, an expert in clinical epidemiology at the University of California, Los Angeles, is critical of the FDA’s policy of allowing manufacturers to make that determination. “The manufacturer has a powerful motive to find an alternative explanation for an adverse event. There’s always the possibility of a separate cause.” Dr Hoffman says that the agency should insist on independent adjudication of serious adverse events.
The database’s value could be further improved, says Dr Hoffman, by including denominator data. “It’s often claimed that even when bad events occur, they have to be relatively rare, given the huge number of exposures. That certainly may be true in some cases. But it’s hard to know for sure in any individual instance, because the FDA doesn’t track the number of exposures. It shouldn’t be that hard … considering that WalMart can apparently track every head of lettuce they sell, at every point of its existence. Of course the FDA would have to require that companies submit data on the quantity of devices sold, and in use.”
Ultimately, says Dr Hoffman, the process of ensuring device safety will continue to be compromised unless the thorny problem of interference from politicians and industry is tackled. “None of this occurs in a vacuum, of course. If we want to see fewer of these debacles in the future, it seems only logical that we’re going to have to look to root causes, such as how campaigns are financed, and how the wealthy and powerful get to have so much more influence on laws, regulations and policies, than do scientists and others who would advocate for making the public health more important than corporate profit.”
However, it is not clear that Dr Hoffman’s wish that scientists have greater influence on regulation than industry is likely to be realised any time soon. President Obama has appointed Margaret Hamburg as FDA commissioner. She has said she will step down as director with Henry Schein—the largest supplier of medical devices in North America and Europe. Hamburg and her husband, who is a hedge fund executive, reported their 2008 income at $10m.17
Cardiac arrhythmia during implantation
along with multitudes of late onset cardiovascular events have been reported.
Intermittent decrease in respiratory flow during sleep has consistently been demonstrated in patients with VNS implants.
This seems to be due to an increase in vagal tone,
a measure of the control the vagus nerve has over the heartbeat.
Clinically significant sleep disordered breathing associated with VNS has been described in pediatric
and adult
patient populations. Most patients undergoing VNS treatment experience an increase of apnoea hypopnoea index (AHI) post treatment,
up to approximately one third develop mild obstructive sleep apnoea post treatment,
and a minority of patients develop severe obstructive sleep aponea related to VNS therapy.
These obstructive events can be alleviated by decreasing the frequency or intensity of VNS stimulation,
by having the patient sleep in non-supine position or by applying positive airway pressure.
Screening for obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) in patients with a seizure disorder who are undergoing a VNS implant is also important because adequate treatment of previously undiagnosed and untreated OSA is likely to result in better seizure control in these patients.
VNS causes stimulation of the superior and recurrent laryngeal nerves and is associated with problems ranging from alteration of voice(66%), coughing(45%), pharyngitis(35%) and throat pain(28%)
and hoarseness (very common) to frank laryngeal muscle spasm and upper airway obstruction (rare).
"Increased muscle tension," presumably in the upper body, may be experienced during the stimulation period.
The left vagus has proportionally lesser number of cardiac efferent fibers and placing the stimulator on this side potentially limits the arrhythmogenic effects of vagal stimulation but reversible bradyarrhythmias associated with vagal nerve stimulators have been well described.
Other nonspecific symptoms include headache, nausea, vomiting, dyspepsia,
dyspnea and paresthesia.
In the treatment of epilepsy, randomized control trials conducted in the United States indicated that one-third of the patients had some type of an increase in seizures, with 17 percent having greater than a 25 percent increase. In each of the studies, there were patients who had greater than a 100 percent increase. In the E05 study, the range went up to a 234 percent increase, while in the E04 study, it went even higher, to a 680 percent maximum range.
The discovery by Kevin J. Tracey that vagus nerve stimulation inhibits inflammation by suppressing pro-inflammatory cytokine production has led to significant interest in the potential to use this approach for treating inflammatory diseases ranging from arthritis to colitis, ischemia, myocardial infarction, and congestive heart failure.
Action potentials transmitted in the vagus nerve activate the efferent arm of the Inflammatory Reflex, the neural circuit that converges on the spleen to inhibit the production of TNF and other pro-inflammatory cytokines by macrophages there.
This efferent arc is also known as the Cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway
Because this strategy targets the release of TNF and other pro-inflammatory cytokines, it may be possible to use vagus nerve stimulation instead of anti-inflammatory antibodies (e.g., Remicade or Enbrel) to treat inflammation.
A recent study published in Science
demonstrated the existence of acetylcholine-synthesizing T-cells in the spleen that respond to vagal stimulation, resulting in suppression of inflammatory response / TNF-alpha via macrophages.
This is currently the only widely used method of therapeutic VNS. It requires the surgical implantation of a stimulator device The Cyberonics VNS devices consist of a titanium-encased generator about the size of a pocket watch with a lithium battery to fuel the generator, a lead wire system with electrodes, and an anchor tether to secure leads to the vagus nerve. The battery life for the pulse generator is "between 1 [and] 16 years, depending on the settings [ie how strong the signal being sent is, the length of time the device stimulates the nerve each time, and how frequently the device stimulates the nerve]."
Implantation of the Cyberonics VNS device is usually done as an out-patient procedure. The procedure goes as follows: an incision is made in the upper left chest and the generator is implanted into a little "pouch" on the left chest under the clavicle. A second incision is made in the neck, so that the surgeon can access the vagus nerve. The surgeon then wraps the leads around the left branch of the vagus nerve, and connects the electrodes to the generator. Once successfully implanted, the generator sends electric impulses to the vagus nerve at regular intervals.
The left vagus nerve is stimulated rather than the right because the right plays a role in cardiac function such that stimulating it could have negative cardiac effects.
The device is currently only made by Cyberonics, Inc.
"Wearable" devices are being tested and developed that involve transcutaneous stimulation and do not require surgery. Electrical impulses are targeted at the aurical (ear), at points where branches of the vagus nerve have cutaneous representation. Specifically the concha has been target for t-VNS.
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