Doctors could hack the nervous system with ultrasound

spectrum.ieee.org

154 points by purpleko a day ago


M0r13n - a day ago

> But in people with diabetes, this sensing system is dysfunctional, and the liver releases glucose even when blood levels are already high, causing a host of health problems.

I am pretty sure, that the dysfunctional glucose sensing and inappropriate liver glucose release are consequences and complications of diabetes, not the primary causes. Diabetes (Type 2) is primarily caused by insulin resistance combined with progressive beta cell dysfunction.

Therefore, treating the liver to treat diabetes seems .... weird?

yoko888 - 14 hours ago

While reading this article, I kept thinking about one thing: are we moving into an era where the nervous system becomes the new kind of medicine? If ultrasound can truly influence the neural signals between the brain and internal organs in a safe and precise way, maybe we won't need to treat individual organs in isolation anymore.

hinkley - 19 hours ago

I know I'm meant to be thinking, "wow this is so awesome, the body is amazing!" but all I can think about is the future of war crimes. And I don't know if that says more about what goes on inside my head or what is happening outside of it.

jollyllama - a day ago

How does the frequency and amplitude of something used for this approach compare to that used for routine fetal imaging?

elric - a day ago

> One day, an AI system might be able to guide at-home users as they place a wearable device on their body and trigger the stimulation.

How would that work? Do we even have a reliable way of detecting localized places of internal inflammation? The article mentions ultrasound imaging, but this is beginning to sound a lot like a "if all you've got is a hammer" type thing.

What about other localized inflammatory conditions, such as asthma?

verisimi - 12 hours ago

Is there much of a functional difference between 'ultrasound' and 'microwaves'? Both seem to impact cells at a distance, causing them to vibrate.

quantadev - 17 hours ago

Consciousness is essentially made of brain waves, and it's the 3D positions of the EM fields which is at the core of it. So it makes sense that jiggling around brain matter to where it is in frequencies that resonate with the same frequencies building consciousness then we can alter conscious state.

It was recently discovered that when listening to music your brain waves sync up to the same frequencies, which I had predicted for a long time. This means the "computational model" (i.e. synapses and neural nets) theory of consciousness is mostly wrong.

AStonesThrow - a day ago

[flagged]

comfrey - a day ago

[flagged]