• Profile
Close

Nerve stimulation in mice suggests new way to reduce delirium after surgery

Duke University Health System News Oct 14, 2018

For adults over age 65, surgical complications can dampen not only their physical health but also their mental sharpness, with more than half of high-risk cases declining into delirium.

In research published this week in the journal Brain Stimulation, Duke University scientists show in a mouse model that a current treatment for seizures can also reverse brain inflammation, such as inflammation after surgery, and the subsequent confusion or cognitive decline that results.

The therapy involves minimally invasive stimulation of the vagus nerve using small electrical pulses comparable to a cell phone’s vibrations.

The scientists used a Doppler ultrasound to guide the placement of a needle that delivers the electrical pulse, avoiding nearby delicate structures such as the carotid artery. Researchers hope to refine the technique into a completely noninvasive approach to preventing cognitive decline when seniors and other at-risk patients have surgery.

“Delirium is now recognized as the most common complication in older adults after surgery,” said Niccolò Terrando, PhD, associate professor of anesthesiology at Duke and the study’s senior author. “For most patients, it lasts a few days and resolves on its own. For some, it can lead to severe complications and even contribute to long-lasting cognitive deficits, like dementia.”

Terrando noted that these cognitive complications have a huge impact on quality of life and can be expensive, with health-care costs for delirium reaching $164 billion a year according to the American Society of Anesthesiologists.

“So far, there is no therapy for this kind of cognitive complication after surgery,” Terrando said. Anti-inflammatory drugs have many side effects and work broadly, he said, and they don’t adequately target the inflammation in the brain that scientists believe triggers cognitive complications.

The vagus nerve helps the brain communicate with the heart, lungs, gut, and other parts of the body. Vagus nerve stimulators have been surgically implanted in epilepsy patients for more than 20 years to reduce seizures.

In recent years, US doctors have also prescribed at-home, noninvasive stimulators for severe headaches. However, there is not substantial evidence that the devices are stimulating the vagus nerve and not other structures near it, said Warren M. Grill, PhD, professor of biomedical engineering at Duke.

For the experimental model, mice with inflammation received one nerve-stimulating treatment lasting several minutes. The researchers monitored for signs of vagus nerve activation, such as a slower heart rate and twitching of muscles around the larynx, and found improved cognitive outcomes and reduced brain inflammation after this treatment.

“This minimally invasive approach is already exceedingly benign, but in the long-term it would be desirable to have an entirely noninvasive approach and we are beginning that work,” Grill said.

Go to Original
Only Doctors with an M3 India account can read this article. Sign up for free or login with your existing account.
4 reasons why Doctors love M3 India
  • Exclusive Write-ups & Webinars by KOLs

  • Nonloggedininfinity icon
    Daily Quiz by specialty
  • Nonloggedinlock icon
    Paid Market Research Surveys
  • Case discussions, News & Journals' summaries
Sign-up / Log In
x
M3 app logo
Choose easy access to M3 India from your mobile!


M3 instruc arrow
Add M3 India to your Home screen
Tap  Chrome menu  and select "Add to Home screen" to pin the M3 India App to your Home screen
Okay