
The Quest for Injectable Brain Implants Has Begun
Science, Spoken
00:00
Introduction
The hard electrodes inserted into the brain to treat Parkinson's and paralysis damage the organ's soft tissue. The body responds by forming scar tissue, which gradually walls off electrodes from the neurons that it was supposed to record or stimulate. Because of scarring, hairbrush-like devices implanted in the brains of paralyzed people are typically removed after five years. A new invention could change that.
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