Title :
Designing a Thalamic Somatosensory Neural Prosthesis: Consistency and Persistence of Percepts Evoked by Electrical Stimulation
Author :
Heming, Ethan A. ; Choo, Ryan ; Davies, Jonathan N. ; Kiss, Zelma H T
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Clinical Neurosci., Univ. of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada
Abstract :
Intuitive somatosensory feedback is required for fine motor control. Here we explored whether thalamic electrical stimulation could provide the necessary durations and consistency of percepts for a human somatosensory neural prosthetic. Continuous and cycling high-frequency (185 Hz, 0.21 ms pulse duration charge balanced square wave) electrical pulses with the cycling patterns varying between 7% and 67% of duty cycle were applied in five patients with chronically implanted deep brain stimulators. Stimulation produced similar percepts to those elicited immediately after surgery. While consecutive continuous stimuli produced decreasing durations of sensation, the amplitude and type of percept did not change. Cycling stimulation with shorter duty cycles produced more persisting percepts. These features suggest that the thalamus could provide a site for stable and enduring sensations necessary for a long term somatosensory neural prosthesis.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; neurophysiology; prosthetics; surgery; cycling high-frequency electrical pulses; cycling stimulation; electrical stimulation; frequency 185 Hz; human somatosensory neural prosthetic; implanted deep brain stimulators; pulse duration charge balanced square wave; surgery; thalamic electrical stimulation; thalamic somatosensory neural prosthesis; thalamus; time 0.21 ms; Analysis of variance; Electrodes; Manganese; Prosthetics; Protocols; Pulse generation; Satellite broadcasting; Deep brain stimulation; microstimulation; neural prostheses; psychophysics; Adult; Deep Brain Stimulation; Electric Stimulation; Electrodes, Implanted; Female; Humans; Male; Neural Prostheses; Prosthesis Design; Psychophysics; Reproducibility of Results; Sensation; Somatosensory Cortex; Thalamus;
Journal_Title :
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNSRE.2011.2152858