Deep brain stimulation (DBS) has been used for more than three decades to treat motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease. Today, ...
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) has been used for more than three decades to treat motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease.
A novel, noninvasive brain stimulation approach—known as transcranial temporal interference stimulation (TIs)—may offer a new way to treat motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease without the need for ...
Patients attended 7.8 ± 3.7 (mean ± standard deviation; range 4–13) programming visits until a satisfactory aDBS configuration was achieved or until they reverted to cDBS (Fig. 1a, left). In patients ...
Precision neurostimulation leverages AI and closed-loop feedback, delivering tailored treatments for neurological disorders ...
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) substantially improves motor symptoms and quality of life in people with movement disorders such as Parkinson disease and dystonia, and it is also being explored as a ...
Researchers at UCSF have taken a step toward a long-sought goal in treating Parkinson's disease: a brain implant that can ...
Electricity is the brain’s language. For a decade, National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding and philanthropy have enabled UC San Francisco physician-scientists to decipher this language and use ...