Elon Musk says another patient got a Neuralink brain implant. Thereâs more to come
More than 45 trials involving brain-computer interfaces are underway in the US
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Your support makes all the difference.Elon Musk has said a third person has received an implant from his brain-computer company Neuralink.
He also said that Neuralink hopes to implant the experimental devices in 20 to 30 more people this year.
âWe've got ... three humans with Neuralinks and all are working well,â he said during a wide-ranging interview at a Las Vegas event streamed on his social media platform X.
Since the first brain implant about a year ago, Musk said the company has upgraded the devices with more electrodes, higher bandwidth and longer battery life.
Musk didn't provide any details about the latest patient, but there are updates on the previous ones.
The second recipient â who has a spinal cord injury and got the implant last summer â was playing video games with the help of the device and learning how to use computer-aided design software to create 3-D objects. The first patient, also paralyzed after a spinal cord injury, described how it helped him play video games and chess.
But while such developments at Neuralink often attract notice, many other companies and research groups are working on similar projects. Two studies last year in the New England Journal of Medicine described how brain-computer interfaces, or BCIs, helped people with ALS communicate better.
More than 45 trials involving brain-computer interfaces are underway, according to a U.S. database of studies. The efforts are aimed at helping treat brain disorders, overcoming brain injuries and other uses.
Many research labs have already shown that humans can accurately control computer cursors using BCIs, said Rajesh Rao, co-director of the Center for Neurotechnology at the University of Washington.
Rao said Neuralink may be unique in two ways: The surgery to implant the device is the first time a robot has been used to implant flexible electrode threads into a human brain to record neural activity and control devices. And those threads may record from more neurons than other interfaces.
Still, he said, the advantages of Neuralinkâs approach have yet to be shown, and some competitors have eclipsed the company in other ways. For example, Rao said companies such as Synchron, Blackrock Neurotech and Onward Medical are already conducting BCI trials on people âusing either less invasive methods or more versatile approachesâ that combine neural recording with stimulation.
What does Neuralink do?
Marco Baptista, chief scientific officer of the Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation, called BCI technology âvery excitingâ with potential benefits to people with paralysis.
Through clinical trials, âweâll be able to see whatâs going to be the winning approach,â he said. âItâs a little early to know."
Baptista said his foundation generally tries to support research teams financially and with expert help â though it hasnât given any money to Neuralink.
âWe need to really support high-risk, high-reward endeavors. This is clearly high-risk, high-reward. We donât know how safe itâs going to be. We donât know how feasible itâs going to be," he said.
Neuralink announced in 2023 that it had gotten permission from U.S. regulators to begin testing its device in people.
While most medical devices go on the market without clinical studies, high-risk ones that undergo pre-market approval need whatâs called an âinvestigational device exemptionâ from the Food and Drug Administration, said Dr. Rita Redberg, a cardiologist at the University of California, San Francisco, who studies high-risk devices.
Neuralink says it has this exemption, but the FDA said it canât confirm or disclose information about a particular study.