New technologies and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis – which step forward rushed by the COVID-19 pandemic?
Autor
Pinto, Susana
Quintarelli, Stefano
Silani, Vincenzo
Institución
Resumen
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a fast-progressive
neurodegenerative disease leading to progressive physical immobility with
usually normal or mild cognitive and/or behavioural involvement. Many patients
are relatively young, instructed, sensitive to new technologies, and
professionally active when developing the first symptoms. Older patients usually
require more time, encouragement, reinforcement and a closer support but,
nevertheless, selecting user-friendly devices, provided earlier in the course of
the disease, and engaging motivated carers may overcome many technological
barriers. ALS may be considered a model for neurodegenerative diseases to
further develop and test new technologies. From multidisciplinary teleconsults
to telemonitoring of the respiratory function, telemedicine has the potentiality
to embrace other fields, including nutrition, physical mobility, and the
interaction with the environment. Brain-computer interfaces and eye tracking
expanded the field of augmentative and alternative communication in ALS but
their potentialities go beyond communication, to cognition and robotics. Virtual
reality and different forms of artificial intelligence present further interesting
possibilities that deserve to be investigated. COVID-19 pandemic is an
unprecedented opportunity to speed up the development and implementation
of new technologies in clinical practice, improving the daily living of both ALS
patients and carers. The present work reviews the current technologies for ALS patients
already in place or being under evaluation with published publications,
prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic.