ful communicationchannel between practicing neuro-
surgeons, and the lack of a detailed understanding of
the hydrodynamics of the disease.
The increaseing number of patients suffering from
this disease, and the associated costs of their treat-
ment, have together highlighted the deficiencies of
the current modes of treatment, and has stimulated re-
search towards the next generation of hydrocephalus
shunts. What is beginning to emerge is a totally new
approach towards the treatment and management of
the disease. This approach responds to the needs of
individual patients in an autonomous way, and forms
a network among those patients to establish a man-
agement and learning protocols to better understand
aspects of hydrocephalus diagnosis and treatment.
In order to achieve this goal, the ”old fashioned”
mechanical shunt valve must first be upgraded to
an electromechanical valve, controlled by software.
This type of shunt will have sensory inputs to al-
low it to process and analyse the patient ICP directly,
and base the patients’ treatement regime on the val-
ues of selected parameters derived therefrom. It has
been demonstrated that certain parameters extracted
from the ICP signal are more meaningful than the
mean or instantaneous ICP in terms of providing in-
formation for diagnosis and predicting clinical out-
come (M. Czosnyka, 2007). Such a system would
be responsive to patient feedback, provind the shunt
with a means of evaluate its own performance, cou-
pled with other derived numeric performance indica-
tors. This can be achieved through communication
between the implanted shunt and a hand-held device,
which could be a normal mobile phone.
This framework of communication, with the abil-
ity of the hand-held device connecting to the inter-
net, gives the ability to connect these shunts in a dis-
tributed network of agents, which could enable shunts
to share their information and disseminate successful
treatment regimes. Moreover, this approach will pro-
vide a platform for classification of ICP signals, hy-
drocephalus patients, and treatment regimes.
2 APPROACH SPECIFICATION
2.1 Intelligent eShunt System
This approach proposes a software-driven,
electronically-controlled shunt replacing the passive
mechanical one. This shunt consists of an electronic
valve, ICP sensor, microcontroller with software, and
a transceiver which provides the shunt two-way to
communicate with the outside word. This modifi-
cation of shunt characteristic by adding autonomy
and intelligence allow us to overcome some of the
problems in the mechanical shunts, farther enables
the system to detect malfunctioning.
2.2 ICP Signal Analysis and Parameters
Depending on symptoms, MRI and mean ICP, for di-
agnosis of Hydrocephalus achieves low accuracy, add
to that cost of treatments and shunt revisions which
exceed $1 Billion in year 2000 (Vacca, 2007). Fur-
thermore, these factors do not reliably predict re-
sponse to treatment or clinical outcome after shunt-
ing (W. Pfisterer, 2007), which leads to emphasis on
discovering new trends and parameters in ICP wave-
form, which carry valuable information about patient
state (M. Czosnyka, 2007).
This approach, by extracting a set of representa-
tive parameters from the ICP signal, enables the elec-
tronic shunt to respond to the dynamics of the ICP sig-
nal and provide a way of controlling the valve on de-
mand. These parameters, such as Pulse amplitude of
the ICP (AMP), RAP index, mean ICP, and mean ICP
wave amplitude and latency, (M. Czosnyka, 2007),
proves efficiency in treatment.
2.3 Distributed Multi-agent
Intelligent agents are an innovativetechnology for de-
veloping complex and distributed systems. These in-
telligent agents have, in an autonomous way, a flex-
ibility in performing actions to achieve their goals.
This flexibility includes reactivity, pro-activity , and
social ability (Weiss, 1999).
Multiagent systems are widely used in healthcare,
medicine and other domains (Moreno, 2003), where
here several novel aspect need to be highlighted:
1. Clustering technique, for clustering patients into
groups.
2. Local and general classification technique for ICP
pattern classification.
3. Performance evaluation technique, for evaluat-
ing agent’s performance, and assigning successful
credit for each case.
4. Using communication language and identification
ontology for agents to announce about their self
and their experiences.
5. Knowledge sharing and negotiation techniques.
This technology provides a suitable choice in this
case, where distributed electronic shunts need to com-
municate and exchange their successful experiences.
These shunts represent a distributed sources of infor-
mation and decision around multiple patients, where
HEALTHINF 2009 - International Conference on Health Informatics
504