4.6 Article

Stimulation of the dorsal root ganglion using an Injectrode(R)

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING
Volume 18, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1741-2552/ac2ffb

Keywords

dorsal root ganglion; pain; electrical stimulation; neuroprostheses; Injectrode; neuromodulation; biomaterials

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB) [1-U18-EB029251-01]

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The study found that the Injectrode can effectively activate primary afferents within the clinical DRG stimulation parameters, with activation thresholds increasing with wider pulse widths. Activation rates decrease with wider pulse widths, and the Injectrode maintains consistent ECAP thresholds over several hours of stimulation.
Objective. The goal of this work was to compare afferent fiber recruitment by dorsal root ganglion (DRG) stimulation using an injectable polymer electrode (Injectrode(R)) and a more traditional cylindrical metal electrode. Approach. We exposed the L6 and L7 DRG in four cats via a partial laminectomy or burr hole. We stimulated the DRG using an Injectrode or a stainless steel (SS) electrode using biphasic pulses at three different pulse widths (80, 150, 300 mu s) and pulse amplitudes spanning the range used for clinical DRG stimulation. We recorded antidromic evoked compound action potentials (ECAPs) in the sciatic, tibial, and common peroneal nerves using nerve cuffs. We calculated the conduction velocity of the ECAPs and determined the charge-thresholds and recruitment rates for ECAPs from A alpha, A beta, and A delta fibers. We also performed electrochemical impedance spectroscopy measurements for both electrode types. Main results. The ECAP thresholds for the Injectrode did not differ from the SS electrode across all primary afferents (A alpha, A beta, A delta) and pulse widths; charge-thresholds increased with wider pulse widths. Thresholds for generating ECAPs from A beta fibers were 100.0 +/- 32.3 nC using the SS electrode, and 90.9 +/- 42.9 nC using the Injectrode. The ECAP thresholds from the Injectrode were consistent over several hours of stimulation. The rate of recruitment was similar between the Injectrodes and SS electrode and decreased with wider pulse widths. Significance. The Injectrode can effectively excite primary afferents when used for DRG stimulation within the range of parameters used for clinical DRG stimulation. The Injectrode can be implanted through minimally invasive techniques while achieving similar neural activation to conventional electrodes, making it an excellent candidate for future DRG stimulation and neuroprosthetic applications.

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