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| OHSU neurosurgeon Ahmed Raslan, M.D., and patient Amber Pearson. Photo Credit: OHSU/Christine Torres Hicks |
A patient at Oregon Health & Science University is the first in the world to benefit from a single stimulator implanted in the brain to effectively control two life-altering conditions: seizures caused by epilepsy and compulsive behavior caused by obsessive-compulsive disorder, or OCD.
Amber Pearson, 34, of Albany, said her seizures are under better control, but the relief from her psychiatric condition is profound.
“OCD is worse than having the seizures,” she said. “Epilepsy brings limitations to my life, but OCD controlled it.”
In the case study, published in the journal Neuron, co-authors from institutions across the country describe the interactive programming of the responsive neurostimulation system, or RNS, that now functions seamlessly to control the compulsions that once ruled her life.
“Before I started treatment with my RNS, I would wash my hands until they would bleed,” Pearson said. “My hands would be so dry that bending my fingers would crack the skin of my knuckles.”














