US Nuclear and Grapheton Provide Significant Advances for Parkinson’s Disease Therapy
Los Angeles, CA, March 17, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NEWMEDIAWIRE
-- The next chapter in US Nuclear’s (OTC: UCLE) brain-machine interface
revolution is treating Parkinson’s Disease. Over 10 million people live
with Parkinson’s Disease worldwide. Parkinson’s Disease is a
degenerative, progressive nervous system disorder that affects nerve cells
in deep parts of the brain that control movement and memory. These nerve
cells become impaired and/or die, thereby producing less dopamine thus
ultimately causing the symptoms of Parkinson’s Disease. These symptoms
include: tremors or shaking in your limbs, slowed movement, rigid muscles,
impaired balance, coordination, and eventually, profound memory loss and
dementia. Fortunately, advances in neurostimulation therapy, such as
those made by Grapheton, have made it possible to treat this terrible
disease.
The treatment is called ‘Deep Brain Stimulation’ (DBS) and involves the surgical implantation of electrodes in your brain that send electrical signals to the areas responsible for body movement. The electrodes do not damage healthy brain tissue or destroy nerve cells; instead they produce electrical impulses that regulate the abnormal impulses, including those caused by Parkinson’s.
A short video made by University Hospitals on treating Parkinson’s Disease using Deep Brain Stimulation can be viewed here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MDTkuCDQU_4
Grapheton has pushed the development of neurostimulation probes even further. Current implantable neural probes for DBS have electrodes that do not last longer than few years and batteries that will deplete over time, therefore requiring repeat cranial surgeries that are expensive, inconvenient, and risky. Current systems also only record electrical signals from the brain and provide a limited window into the complex electrical and chemical interactions at the areas of treatment which can cause side effects.
Grapheton has solved these issues by:
- Creating a new carbon-based electrode that doesn’t corrode and can last as long as 40 years or more, thereby greatly reducing the surgery required for maintenance.
- Creating a new self-charging battery that uses the brain’s own salty liquid environment as the power source, negating the need for battery replacement/maintenance.
- Two-way electrical and chemical communication with brain neurons which allows more effective, tailored, and on-demand electrical stimulation, and eliminates most of the current side-effects thus allowing treatment of a wider variety of patients.
Grapheton will provide the neurostimulation probes while US Nuclear provides the ancillary equipment for processing the electrical signals and data.
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CONTACT:
US Nuclear Corp. (OTCBB: UCLE)
Robert I. Goldstein, President, CEO, and Chairman
Rachel Boulds, Chief Financial Officer
(818) 883 7043
Email: info@usnuclearcorp.com