Introduction Brain pacemakers are interesting inventions of modern technology, medical devices fixed in the brain, and send shock signals to the target tissues of the brain. This device is used to support treatment of epilepsy patients, suppression of seizures, and management of movement of Parkinson's patients. Parkinson's disease may affect your behavior. It occurs when there is a problem with specific nerve cells in the brain. In addition, it treats severe depression.
Medicine has always been at the forefront of these applications, as someone has enabled someone to simplify complicated ethical issues through the use of technology. 100,000 people with Parkinson's disease worldwide are using implants. It is a so-called brain pacemaker. Some artificial retina for blindness and cochlear implants for hearing loss are common. The Ministry of Defense funds funded most of this development through the military research department and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Using this fund, the Institute of Neuroengineering Center at the University of Southern California tests chip implants in the brain to restore lost memory. This protocol may be applied to Alzheimer's patients one day and to patients with stroke or traumatic brain injury. Connecting the human brain to the machine creates an unmatched fighter plane and DARPA will not be lost. "Do not forget that DARPA's work does not help others.
DBS (Deep Brain Stimulation) includes the surgical treatment of brain pacemakers, which are medical devices that send electrical impulses to specific parts of the brain. Because this DBS helps to alleviate symptoms of Parkinson's disease exercise fluctuation and tremor. However, this treatment is usually recommended for patients with progressive Parkinson's disease where the effect of drug treatment is no longer effective. DBS is not usually an option of choice because neurosurgery is unpredictable in adverse reactions including the possibility of complications of surgery such as obsessive compulsive disorder, depression, hallucinations, and intracerebral hemorrhage. Even after surgery, the patient receives swelling of the brain, malaise, disorientation, and final resection of the suture.