Advertisement

Winning idea from Hong Kong’s City I&T Grand Challenge transforms treatment for neurological disorders

  • Hong Kong start-up Neuropix has launched a portable medical device that alleviates symptoms of neurological disorders such as epileptic seizures
  • CEO and founder Daniel Ko says the support that his company received through the competition helped propel the product’s development from concept to reality

Paid Post:City I&T Grand Challenge
Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
New device to treat neurological disorders propelled to market by Hong Kong I&T competition

[Sponsored article]

Advertisement

More than one in five people in Hong Kong suffer from neurological disorders, which range from migraines and depression to epilepsy. Such conditions have typically been treated with medications, but they are not always effective – for example, anti-epileptic drugs help control seizures in around seven out of 10 patients.

Now, innovations in medical technology offer hope with easy-to-use and effective treatments. Hong Kong start-up Neuropix Company Ltd has developed a wearable wireless neurostimulation device that helps manage neurological disorders by rebalancing patients’ brain chemistry.

Hong Kong start-up Neuropix has developed a wearable wireless device that provides transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation, or tVNS, which can help alleviate symptoms of various neurological disorders over time. Photo: SCMP
Hong Kong start-up Neuropix has developed a wearable wireless device that provides transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation, or tVNS, which can help alleviate symptoms of various neurological disorders over time. Photo: SCMP

In 2021, Neuropix was named one of the award winners in the Open Group of the City I&T Grand Challenge, organised by the Innovation and Technology Commission (ITC) together with Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation (HKSTP). The competition seeks creative solutions to transform Hong Kong through innovation and technology, with entries open to primary schools, secondary schools, universities and the general public, both locally and worldwide.

Neuropix, which won the Innovation Award, has since seen its idea evolve into a real-life product. This new product provides a treatment called tVNS – which stands for transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation – and consists of a medical device with wireless electrodes to be worn in the ear. It uses electrical pulses to activate small nerve fibres inside the ear, and those in turn stimulate the vagus nerve, a key component of the nervous system that transmits important sensory and functional signals between the brain and body.

Neurological disorders often involve an imbalance in these signals, which are associated with symptoms such as epileptic seizures. The tVNS treatment helps reset the balance of neurotransmission in the brain.

Neuropix, led by CEO and founder Dr Daniel Ko, was a winner of the Innovation Award in the Open Group of the City I&T Grand Challenge, organised by the Innovation and Technology Commission and Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation. Photo: Neuropix
Neuropix, led by CEO and founder Dr Daniel Ko, was a winner of the Innovation Award in the Open Group of the City I&T Grand Challenge, organised by the Innovation and Technology Commission and Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation. Photo: Neuropix

Dr Daniel Ko, CEO and founder of Neuropix, explains: “The tVNS device is a non-invasive therapeutic application which delivers specific electrical pulses to key nerve fibres, which help rebalance brain chemistry and ease disease symptoms over time.”

Advertisement
Advertisement