Bioresorbable silicon electronic sensors for the brain
- PMID: 26779949
- DOI: 10.1038/nature16492
Bioresorbable silicon electronic sensors for the brain
Abstract
Many procedures in modern clinical medicine rely on the use of electronic implants in treating conditions that range from acute coronary events to traumatic injury. However, standard permanent electronic hardware acts as a nidus for infection: bacteria form biofilms along percutaneous wires, or seed haematogenously, with the potential to migrate within the body and to provoke immune-mediated pathological tissue reactions. The associated surgical retrieval procedures, meanwhile, subject patients to the distress associated with re-operation and expose them to additional complications. Here, we report materials, device architectures, integration strategies, and in vivo demonstrations in rats of implantable, multifunctional silicon sensors for the brain, for which all of the constituent materials naturally resorb via hydrolysis and/or metabolic action, eliminating the need for extraction. Continuous monitoring of intracranial pressure and temperature illustrates functionality essential to the treatment of traumatic brain injury; the measurement performance of our resorbable devices compares favourably with that of non-resorbable clinical standards. In our experiments, insulated percutaneous wires connect to an externally mounted, miniaturized wireless potentiostat for data transmission. In a separate set-up, we connect a sensor to an implanted (but only partially resorbable) data-communication system, proving the principle that there is no need for any percutaneous wiring. The devices can be adapted to sense fluid flow, motion, pH or thermal characteristics, in formats that are compatible with the body's abdomen and extremities, as well as the deep brain, suggesting that the sensors might meet many needs in clinical medicine.
Comment in
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Traumatic brain injury: Soluble sensors successful in rats.Nat Rev Neurol. 2016 Mar;12(3):128. doi: 10.1038/nrneurol.2016.15. Epub 2016 Feb 5. Nat Rev Neurol. 2016. PMID: 26846454 No abstract available.
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Bioresorbable Intracranial Sensors: A New Frontier for Neurosurgeons.World Neurosurg. 2016 Sep;93:421-2. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2016.06.076. Epub 2016 Jun 25. World Neurosurg. 2016. PMID: 27353555 No abstract available.
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Wireless Intracranial Monitor: A Bioresorbable Silicon Sensor.World Neurosurg. 2016 Nov;95:582-586. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2016.08.066. Epub 2016 Aug 23. World Neurosurg. 2016. PMID: 27565462 No abstract available.
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Bioresorbable Silicon Electronic Sensors for the Brain.Neurosurgery. 2016 Oct;79(4):N19. doi: 10.1227/01.neu.0000499711.96831.af. Neurosurgery. 2016. PMID: 27635973 No abstract available.
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