Cyborgs: Making and the challenges

Relevance: Mains: G.S paper III: Science and tech

Why in news?

  • A recent medical trial restored partial sight to six blind people via an implant that transmits video images directly to the brain.
  • The device used was called Orion, which feeds images from a camera directly to the brain.
  • “Cognitive neuroprosthetics” are devices that directly interface with the brain to improve memory, attention, emotion and much more.

Challenges with existing system

  • Current neuromodulation systems need surgical implantation of bulky components with limited battery life.
  • Batteries impact an intervention’s cost and lifetime, a device’s size and weight, the need for repeat surgeries and problems of tissue-heating and performance compromises. This is due to the relatively high power consumption of the electronics for a given performance requirement.
  • The National Institutes of Health in the US opines that pacemaker batteries last between 5-15 years, but their average lifespan is 6-7 years; a doctor has to operate again after about 7 years to replace either the battery or the pacemaker itself.

Way forward

  • A flexible chip-type implant that harnesses glucose present in the body and converts it into electrical energy that can power a neurological implant.
  • The problem of battery size can be tackled by reducing the power consumption and operating the electronics near fundamental levels of physics.
  • Achieving a higher number of channels, better signal-to-noise ratio, and improved flexibility and robustness while working at ultra-low power can significantly lower implant sizes without sacrificing performance.
  • Ultra-low-power semiconductors to generate chipsets that have been validated in lab and animal trials.
  • Spinal cord stimulation and deep brain stimulation are major target applications.
  • Neuromodulation is the most lucrative sector in the European neurological device market.

Conclusion

  • In India, it is estimated that about 30 million people suffer from various forms of neurological diseases and the average prevalence rate is as high as 2,394 patients per 100,000 of the population.
  • Current neuromodulation devices cost between $10,000 and $40,000, putting them out of reach for many Indians.

 

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