There is a very serious scandal that has been long covered on this blog, a scandal that the mainstream press has ignored. This is the scandal of very sick epilepsy patients being recklessly endangered by experiment-performing brain experts implanting medically unnecessary microelectrodes deep into the brains of such patients.
Epilepsy patients suffer from seizures, which have been described as electrical storms in the brain. When people have epilepsy, the first line of treatment is drugs such as levetiracetam. Such drugs work to prevent seizures for the great majority of epilepsy patients. But for a small fraction of epilepsy patients, such drugs do not work. Such patients are called drug-resistant epilepsy patients.
The sickest type of epilepsy patient is one suffering from frequent seizures that cannot be controlled by drugs, seizures so bad and so frequent that brain surgery is needed, to stop seizures that may be occurring in the patient as often as 15 times a day. Such surgery typically involves extracting a portion of the brain, for the sake of preventing the seizures. It's a drastic approach, but it can be surprisingly effective. And the cognitive effects are typically relatively minor -- just as we would expect if the brain is not the source of your mind, and not the storage place of your memories. Amazingly, there has often occurred the removal of an entire half of the brain in operations to prevent epileptic seizures. My post here discusses how such operations have often involved little damage to either memory or mental capacity, contrary to the dogma that brains store memories and that brains produce thinking.
Usually the surgical operation to try to prevent seizures involves some excision of brain tissue less than the removal of a full half of a brain. To try to help determine where to extract brain tissue without causing cognitive damage or functional damage, medical professionals will typically use electrodes to try to determine which brain areas seizures are coming from. So the skull of a sick epilepsy patient may be opened up, and electrodes may be placed on particular spots of the brain.
At this point there may enter an experimental neuroscientist. The experimental neuroscientist may say something like this to a doctor:
"So, you're already opening up this guy's skull to implant electrodes on his brain. How about implanting some additional electrodes -- some more deeply implanted microelectrodes that will monitor the firing of individual neurons? I would like to do a particular type of experiment that requires data on the firing of individual neurons, and this is a great opportunity for such an experiment."
At this point a good doctor properly guarding the best interests of his patients should always give the same answer, saying something like this:
"Get the f*** out of here, you parasite! The last thing in the world my horribly suffering patient needs is to be involved in is some damn experiment that may endanger him unnecessarily! I am trying to HEAL this sick-as-hell person, goddammit!"
But very sadly, many doctors are failing to act in such a way. Instead many doctors are giving a green light to neuroscientists wanting to use very sick epilepsy patients for neuroscience experiments involving microelectrode implantation. The goal of the neuroscientist may be to monitor the exact firing rate of individual neurons. Such a thing has no use in evaluating what parts of the brain should be removed to stop seizures. And no reliable science results, because what goes on is typically pareidolia "noise mining" correlation fishing using study group sizes way too small to provide robust evidence of anything.
While the implanting of regular electrodes may be necessary for surgical evaluation of epilepsy patients, the implanting of microelectrodes is not necessary for surgical evaluation. A scientific paper tells us, "Sixty-five years after single units were first recorded in the human brain, there remain no established clinical indications [i.e. medical justifications] for microelectrode recordings in the presurgical evaluation of patients with epilepsy (Cash and Hochberg, 2015)."
Implanting microelectrodes in the brain of very sick epilepsy patients about to undergo surgery is a sickening case of the abuse of the weakest for the sake of the powerful, the powerful being the scientists conducting such experiments. The medically unnecessary implantation of microelectrodes has very serious risks.
But, you may say, the scientists doing these experiments say that they got "informed consent" from the epilepsy patients who they penetrated with microelectrodes. But did they really do that? There is the serious question of whether it is really possible to get any meaningful or adequate degree of "informed consent" from some patient suffering from very bad or very frequent seizures, seizures so bad that doctors are about to cut out a sizable part of the person's brain.
What do you call it when someone penetrates another person, a person who is not mentally fit to be providing full meaningful consent? Typically such actions fall under categories called second-degree rape or third-degree rape.
When people think of rape, they think of first-degree rape, when someone rapes another person who is actively resisting or screaming her non-consent. But under the law there are other categories of rape, what are called second-degree rape or third-degree rape. In some of the 50 states of the United States, a person is guilty of third-degree rape if he commits sexual penetration into someone lacking the mental capacity to give consent. That lack of mental capacity may be for various reasons including intoxication or other factors that may affect normal mental functioning. In Louisiana, for example, you can be found guilty of third-degree rape if you had sex with a person who was intoxicated.
But, we may ask, is there any big difference between the mental incapacitation of someone intoxicated and someone suffering up to 15 seizures a day? Are not both of these in the same class of mental incapacitation?
What is it called in Louisiana if you unnecessarily penetrate the vagina of some woman who is drunk? That is called third-degree rape. But what should we call it when a neuroscientist unnecessarily penetrates with microelectrodes the brain of some epilepsy patient suffering many seizures a day, some patient too dazed and debilitated and confused to be giving any "informed consent" worthy of the name? Perhaps that should be called "microelectrode rape."
In the conversation below, an authority is setting up a rape.
Authority: So you have those horrible seizures 15 times a day -- I want to help. So can I open up your brain to evaluate you for surgery?
Groaning, dazed epilepsy patient: Sure, Doc, whatever you want, just stop these damn seizures that are driving me crazy!
Authority: And my colleague wants to insert his penis into your vagina.
Groaning, dazed epilepsy patient: Sure, Doc, whatever you want, just stop these damn seizures that are knocking me out 15 times a day!
No very meaningful degree of "informed consent" is going on here, so there would probably be a crime of third-degree rape if this proceeds. And what goes on in the conversation below seems just as bad.
Authority: So you have those horrible seizures 15 times a day -- I want to help. So can I open up your brain to evaluate you for surgery, and hook up some electrodes?
Groaning, dazed epilepsy patient: Sure, Doc, whatever you want, just stop these damn seizures that are driving me crazy!
Authority: And I also want to insert into your brain another type of electrode called microelectrodes, for the sake of an experiment I want to perform.
Groaning, dazed epilepsy patient: Sure, Doc, whatever you want, just stop these damn seizures that are knocking me out 15 times a day!
No very meaningful degree of "informed consent" is going on here, and the authority doing such penetration is probably guilty of a crime of abuse and endangerment, something as bad as third-degree rape. We might reasonably use the term "microelectrode rape" to describe such crimes of abuse and endangerment, which take place against people so sick and so dazed and mentally disabled that they probably are not giving any meaningful or sufficient degree of informed consent.
The fact that the authorities doing such sinister penetrations get a signed document from those they abuse and endanger means very little. Is there any meaning when you get a "hurry up and sign" signature under conditions such as these?






