4.8 Review

Piezoelectric Nanomaterials Activated by Ultrasound: The Pathway from Discovery to Future Clinical Adoption

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages 11066-11086

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c03087

Keywords

piezoelectric nanomaterials; ultrasound; electric stimuli; piezoelectric effect; mechanoelectrical transduction; neuromodulation; regenerative medicine; cancer treatment

Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [814413]
  2. ERC-2017-CoG HINBOTS [771565]

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Piezoelectric nanomaterials offer the potential for wireless electrical stimulation in biomedical applications. However, challenges remain in translating this technology into clinical practice, including issues with measurement of piezoelectric properties, control of ultrasound dose, and understanding of bioeffects. Addressing these challenges will be crucial for advancing the use of piezoelectric stimulation in the clinical setting.
Electrical stimulation has shown great promise in biomedical applications, such as regenerative medicine, neuromodulation, and cancer treatment. Yet, the use of electrical end effectors such as electrodes requires connectors and batteries, which dramatically hamper the translation of electrical stimulation technologies in several scenarios. Piezoelectric nanomaterials can overcome the limitations of current electrical stimulation procedures as they can be wirelessly activated by external energy sources such as ultrasound. Wireless electrical stimulation mediated by piezoelectric nanoarchitectures constitutes an innovative paradigm enabling the induction of electrical cues within the body in a localized, wireless, and minimally invasive fashion. In this review, we highlight the fundamental mechanisms of acoustically mediated piezoelectric stimulation and its applications in the biomedical area. Yet, the adoption of this technology in a clinical practice is in its infancy, as several open issues, such as piezoelectric properties measurement, control of the ultrasound dose in vitro, modeling and measurement of the piezo effects, knowledge on the triggered bioeffects, therapy targeting, biocompatibility studies, and control of the ultrasound dose delivered in vivo, must be addressed. This article explores the current open challenges in piezoelectric stimulation and proposes strategies that may guide future research efforts in this field toward the translation of this technology to the clinical scene.

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