Deployment of an electrocorticography system with a soft robotic actuator
- PMID: 37163609
- DOI: 10.1126/scirobotics.add1002
Deployment of an electrocorticography system with a soft robotic actuator
Abstract
Electrocorticography (ECoG) is a minimally invasive approach frequently used clinically to map epileptogenic regions of the brain and facilitate lesion resection surgery and increasingly explored in brain-machine interface applications. Current devices display limitations that require trade-offs among cortical surface coverage, spatial electrode resolution, aesthetic, and risk consequences and often limit the use of the mapping technology to the operating room. In this work, we report on a scalable technique for the fabrication of large-area soft robotic electrode arrays and their deployment on the cortex through a square-centimeter burr hole using a pressure-driven actuation mechanism called eversion. The deployable system consists of up to six prefolded soft legs, and it is placed subdurally on the cortex using an aqueous pressurized solution and secured to the pedestal on the rim of the small craniotomy. Each leg contains soft, microfabricated electrodes and strain sensors for real-time deployment monitoring. In a proof-of-concept acute surgery, a soft robotic electrode array was successfully deployed on the cortex of a minipig to record sensory cortical activity. This soft robotic neurotechnology opens promising avenues for minimally invasive cortical surgery and applications related to neurological disorders such as motor and sensory deficits.
Comment in
-
Accessing the brain with soft deployable electrocorticography arrays.Sci Robot. 2023 May 17;8(78):eadg2785. doi: 10.1126/scirobotics.adg2785. Epub 2023 May 10. Sci Robot. 2023. PMID: 37163610
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources