Magnetic Brain Computer interface Surface Membrane
20220110572 · 2022-04-14
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
A61B5/271
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A flexible, artificial membrane circuit comprised of controlled electromagnetic coils placed in contact with the surface of tissue-capable-of-generating-an-action-potential for measurement and stimulation of activity in discrete regions of tissue. Circuit includes control systems, power systems and wireless communication systems as well to allow coil stimulation activity to be controlled by an outside source and to relay measurements of activity to an outside device.
Claims
1. A flexible, biocompatible, artificial membrane comprised of: a. A flexible circuit comprised of: i. Flexible, electronic circuitry comprising an array or arrays and/or a lattice or lattices of electromagnetic coils. ii. Flexible, electronic circuitry comprising control systems for said electromagnetic coils. 1. Systems which control whether each coil is stimulating and/or measuring. 2. Systems which control the current flowing to each coil when stimulating. 3. Systems which link each coil in series with a current monitor when measuring. 4. Systems which control current flow at vertices in the case of dynamic coil arrays or lattices. iii. Flexible, electronic circuitry comprising a wireless communication system or systems capable of sending information to and receiving information from an outside device. iv. Flexible, electronic circuitry capable of controlling power supply to power the overall circuit b. A flexible circuit matrix c. A biocompatible outer layer
2. A system of flexible, electronic circuitry capable of measurement and stimulation of electrical activity in discrete regions of tissue-capable-of-generating-an-action-potential (APT) using electromagnetic coils within a biocompatible, artificial membrane in contact with the APT. a. A process by which electromagnetic coils, within a biocompatible, artificial membrane in contact with APT, are used to stimulate APT at multiple, discrete locations across an area and/or at varying tissue depths. b. A process by which electromagnetic coils, within a biocompatible, artificial membrane in contact with tissue, are used to measure the electrical activity of APT at multiple, discrete locations across an area and/or at varying tissue depths. c. A process by which multiple arrays and/or lattices of electromagnetic coils are layered to increase the number of discrete locations within APT that can be stimulated and measured.
3. A system where the geometries of electromagnetic coils, within a biocompatible, artificial membrane in contact with tissue, are dynamically controlled: a. A process by which the passage of current through the vertices of a two-dimensional array or arrays and/or a three-dimensional lattice or lattices of electromagnetic coils is dynamically controlled. i. A process by which current entering a vertex is allowed or disallowed to pass through each of the possible exit paths.
4. A process by which a wireless communications system receives and transmits information from and to an outside device.
5. A process by which a coil control system, outlined in claim 1. a. ii., passes current through various coils to stimulate desired foci in response to input instructions.
6. A process by which a coil control system, outlined in claim 1. a. ii., outputs induced current readings from various coils to measure the electromagnetic activity of desired foci in response to input instructions.
7. A process by which a coil control system, outlined in claim 1. a. ii., controls the magnitude of current applied to electromagnetic coils.
8. A power system which provides the necessary energy to power the circuit.
Description
DRAWING
[0010]
[0011] The illustration in
[0012]
[0013] The illustration in
[0014]
[0015]
[0016] Examination of the relative strengths of signals across four or more coils (assuming three or more coils do not share the same coordinate value in any dimension) can be used to calculate source location within a three-dimensional volume of APT. This is done by examining the relative amplitudes of discrete signals across the four coils. Usually, the coil-readings chosen by the computer to best calculate the location of region of activity are the readings of the three coils that frame the area directly over the region of activity, and a coil in the plane above them. In this example, signals are represented as strings of letters, with the same letters indicating the same signal being detected by both coils and their position left to right representing their occurrence within time. Non-similarities represent signals picked up by one coil at a certain time but not the other. In this way, discrete signals detected by two coils can be filtered to provide a profile of the activity occurring within the region between the two coils.
[0017]
[0018] The perspective illustration shows what an MBCISM would look like when in operational contact with an exposed brain, resting much like a deflated whoopee cushion adjacent to the APT it interfaces with. The cross-sectional illustration demonstrates a hollow interior with a face in contact with the APT surface (proximal) and a face which is directed away (distal). Control, communication and power systems would be located on the distal surface while EM coil arrays would be on the proximal surface. The small, hollow protuberance on the top of the MCBISM is necessary for the implantation and sub-cranial inflation of the device within subarachnoid space. It is shown as being open and vertical in this illustration. It is made of the same flexible material as the rest of the circuit and serves as a means by which fluid can be pumped into the MBCISM to inflate it when under the skull. After filling, it would be pinched off, permanently sealed and laid flush with the rest of the membrane. One of the key advantages of the MBCISM is that the flexible membrane can be inserted through a relatively small hole in the skull and then inflated to cover a much wider area, thus simplifying the implantation operation vs electrodes, reducing risk, scarring and recovery time. The enclosed volume of fluid within the membrane would be under enough pressure to keep the proximal surface of the MBCISM gently but firmly pressed against the pial surface of the brain and the distal surface against the arachnoid and dura mater of the cranium, thus ensuring a good interface.
[0019] Notice, a section of the proximal surface of the MBCISM is circled and enlarged at the top of
[0020]
[0021] This illustration at the top of
[0022]
[0023] The illustration in
[0024]
[0025] This series of illustrations show a simplified circuit diagram of a MBCISM to illustrate how reading and writing occur. The illustration at top represents a simplified circuit diagram, showing three EM coils connected to both an ammeter and a voltage controller/switch. The ammeter is connected to a transmitter, which sends readings wirelessly to an outside device using energy from the power supply. The voltage controller/switch, meanwhile, is connected to the power supply and a receiver. The receiver gives the voltage controller/switch signals as to what EM coils to send current to, the magnitude of the current being sent and the direction of the current.
[0026] When reading, a switch simply bypasses all of the voltage control circuitry and closes the circuits for the EM coils. Circuit for all coils run through an ammeter, so current induced in the EM coils by APT activity can be measured and transmitted to an outside device. It should be noted that not all circuitry within the voltage controller (dashed box below the ammeter) is shown here. Instead, only relevant circuits are illustrated for the sake of simplicity. The function of MBCISM circuitry with regards to reading is to collect the greatest number of coil-readings possible from across as wide a volume of APT as possible, with the highest possible resolution for induced-current measurements.
[0027] When writing, the receiver sends signals to the switch to connect certain EM coils to the voltage controller. For simplicity, the control of current from the power source to various coil circuits is illustrated in the diagram by the points of contact between the output from the receiver and the power supply to the coils. However, the receiver not only controls which coils have current running through them, but also how much current in what direction. Circuitry responsible for controlling current magnitude and direction is not shown explicitly in the diagram, but occurs within the voltage-controller/switch complex with input from the receiver. Gating of current occurs via transistors controlled by the receiver. The writing function of MBCISM circuitry is to operate as a system capable of inducing action potentials in as many variably-sized, discrete regions of APT as possible within a set amount of time. The determination of which coil-pairs should be stimulated, how much current should be sent through each coil pair, and the direction of current that passes through each coil is made by an outside computational device.