At Stanford, a treatment that aims magnetic pulses at the brain is showing results for people with treatment-resistant depression. It’s called SAINT, and here’s how it works.
Scientists at EPFL have developed an innovative, non-invasive brain stimulation therapy to significantly improve visual function in stroke patients who have suffered vision loss following a stroke.
Swedish neurotech startup Flow Neuroscience has secured FDA approval for the first brain stimulation device for home use in ...
Medical Device Network on MSN
Nia Therapeutics publishes first in vivo validation of SNS
Nia Therapeutics has published peer-reviewed data in Brain Stimulation on the first in vivo validation of its wireless, ...
Deep brain stimulation – implants in the brain that act as a kind of 'pacemaker' – has led to clinical improvements in half of the participants with treatment-resistant severe depression in an 'open ...
Each year, thousands of stroke survivors are left with hemianopia, a condition that causes loss of half of their visual field (the “vertical midline”). Hemianopia severely affects daily activities ...
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