Logo image
Bioresorbable Electrode Array for Electrophysiological and Pressure Signal Recording in the Brain
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Bioresorbable Electrode Array for Electrophysiological and Pressure Signal Recording in the Brain

Kedi Xu, Shijian Li, Shurong Dong, Shaomin Zhang, Gang Pan, Guangming Wang, Lin Shi, Wei Guo, Chaonan Yu and Jikui Luo
Advanced healthcare materials, Vol.8(15), pp.e1801649-n/a
01/08/2019
PMID: 31168937

Abstract

Engineering Engineering, Biomedical Materials Science Materials Science, Biomaterials Nanoscience & Nanotechnology Science & Technology Science & Technology - Other Topics Technology
Medical implantation of an electrocorticography (ECoG) recording system for brain monitoring is an effective clinical tool for seizure focus location and brain disease diagnosis. Planar and flexible ECoG electrodes can minimize the risks of infection and serious inflammatory response, and their good shape adaptability allows the device to fit complex cortex shape and structure to record brain signals with high spatial and temporal resolution. However, these ECoG electrodes require an additional surgery to remove the implant, which imposes potential medical risks. Here, a novel flexible and bioresorbable ECoG device integrated with an intracortical pressure sensor for monitoring swelling of the cortex during operation is reported. The ECoG device is fabricated with poly(l-lactide) and polycaprolactone composite and transient metal molybdenum. In vivo tests on rats show that the ECoG system can record the dynamic changes in brain signals for the different epilepsy stages with high resolution, while the malleable pressure sensor shows a linear relationship between the pressure and resistance in in vitro tests. In vitro degradation experiments show that the ECoG system can work stably for about five days before loss of efficacy, and the whole ECoG system degrades completely in a phosphate buffer solution in about 100 days.

Metrics

25 Record Views
70 Times Cited - Scopus

Details

Logo image

Usage Policy