• DocumentCode
    1005644
  • Title

    Arrays for chronic functional microstimulation of the lumbosacral spinal cord

  • Author

    McCreery, Douglas ; Pikov, Victor ; Lossinsky, Albert ; Bullara, Leo ; Agnew, William

  • Author_Institution
    Neural Eng. Program, Huntington Med. Res. Inst.s, Pasadena, CA, USA
  • Volume
    12
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2004
  • fDate
    6/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    195
  • Lastpage
    207
  • Abstract
    Our objective is to develop neural prostheses based on an array of microelectrodes implanted into the sacral spinal cord, that will allow persons with spinal cord injuries to regain control of their bladder and bowels. For our chronic cat model, we have developed two microelectrode arrays, one type containing nine discrete activated iridium microelectrodes and the second utilizing silicon substrate probes with multiple electrode sites on each probe. Both types can elicit an increase in the pressure within the urinary bladder of more than 40-mm Hg and/or relaxation of the urethral sphincter. A stimulus of 100 μA and 400 μs/ph at 20 Hz (charge-balanced pulses) was required to induce a large increase in bladder pressure or relaxation of the urethral sphincter. We found that 24 h of continuous stimulation with these parameters induced tissue injury (disrupted neuropil, infiltration of inflammatory cells, and loss of neurons close to the tip sites). However, a neural prosthesis that is intended to restore bladder control after spinal cord injury would not operate continuously. Thus, when this stimulus was applied for 24 h, at a 10% duty cycle (1 min of stimulation, then 9 min without stimulation) only minimal histologic changes were observed.
  • Keywords
    biocontrol; microelectrodes; neuromuscular stimulation; prosthetics; 1 min; 100 muA; 20 Hz; 24 h; 9 min; bladder control; bowel control; chronic cat model,; chronic functional microstimulation; disrupted neuropil; inflammatory cell infiltration; lumbosacral spinal cord; microelectrode arrays; neural prostheses; neurons; sacral spinal cord; spinal cord injuries; tissue injury; urethral sphincter; urinary bladder; Bladder; Electrodes; Mercury (metals); Microelectrodes; Neurons; Probes; Prosthetics; Silicon; Spinal cord; Spinal cord injury; Animals; Cats; Electric Stimulation; Electrodes, Implanted; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Foreign-Body Reaction; Lumbosacral Region; Male; Microelectrodes; Spinal Cord; Urinary Bladder; Urination;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1534-4320
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TNSRE.2004.827223
  • Filename
    1304861