| Literature DB >> 24130527 |
Abstract
The chronic effects of electrical stimulation in unrestrained awake rodents are best studied with a wireless neural stimulator that can operate unsupervised for several weeks or more. A robust, inexpensive, easily built, cranially implantable stimulator was developed to explore the restorative effects of brainstem stimulation after neurotrauma. Its connectorless electrodes directly protrude from a cuboid epoxy capsule containing all circuitry and power sources. This physical arrangement prevents fluid leaks or wire breakage and also simplifies and speeds implantation. Constant-current pulses of high compliance (34 volts) are delivered from a step-up voltage regulator under microprocessor control. A slowly pulsed magnetic field controls activation state and stimulation parameters. Program status is signaled to a remote reader by interval-modulated infrared pulses. Capsule size is limited by the two batteries. Silver oxide batteries rated at 8 mA-h were used routinely in 8 mm wide, 15 mm long and 4 mm high capsules. Devices of smaller contact area (5 by 12 mm) but taller (6 mm) were created for mice. Microstimulation of the rat's raphe nuclei with intermittent 5-min (50% duty cycle) trains of 30 μA, 1 ms pulses at 8 or 24 Hz frequency during 12 daylight hours lasted 21.1 days ±0.8 (mean ± standard error, Kaplan-Meir censored estimate, n = 128). Extended lifetimes (>6 weeks, no failures, n = 16) were achieved with larger batteries (44 mA-h) in longer (18 mm), taller (6 mm) capsules. The circuit and electrode design are versatile; simple modifications allowed durable constant-voltage stimulation of the rat's sciatic nerve through a cylindrical cathode from a subcutaneous pelvic capsule. Devices with these general features can address in small mammals many of the biological and technical questions arising neurosurgically with prolonged peripheral or deep brain stimulation.Entities:
Keywords: brainstem; chronic effects; deep brain stimulation (DBS); rodents; wireless implant
Year: 2013 PMID: 24130527 PMCID: PMC3795361 DOI: 10.3389/fneng.2013.00008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroeng ISSN: 1662-6443
Figure 1(A) Schematic of the stimulator circuit in the usual current-source configuration. The value for R2 was 42 kilohm for fixed amplitude stimulation (30 μA) and 10 kilohm for variable amplitude. In the alternative voltage-source configuration, R2 is 10 kilohm and an additional resistor of 40 kilohm is placed between the anode and cathode, giving a fixed 5-volt stimulus. (B) Photograph of a completed, epoxy-embedded stimulator containing the largest batteries used (type 392). Some partly visible components are labeled. (C) A mouse brain stimulator before embedding. This implementation contains the smallest batteries used (type 337). The photograph has the same scale as panel (B).
Figure 2. (A) The stimulus current measured at 5 different stimulus amplitudes. (B) External signaling pulses sent during the highest amplitude current. The pattern alternated between (B1) and (B2) during the active stimulation phase. The first pulse interval in (B1) represents stimulus width plus clock time and the second represents stimulus amplitude; the first interval in (B2) represents pulse width and the second represents clock time plus amplitude. The alternation allows more than two parameters to be encoded with two intervals, to reduce power usage while transmitting at a reasonably fast update rate to the external reader. Inactive phases were signaled by the presence of four pulses, so there was no alternation of pattern. (C) Control voltages delivered during the stimulus pulses of graph (A). All graphs have the same time base.
Figure 3Recordings made differentially from dorsal rootlets of lumbar segment L4. The proximal end of the cut sciatic nerve was stimulated at approximately 20 Hz. Each trace is from a different rat recorded on the last day of continuous stimulation and shows two responses per trace. The differences between traces in the sizes and shapes of evoked response are explained by their dependence on factors such as the positioning of the paired recording electrodes and inter-electrode conductance.
Comparison of some recent brain stimulators for small animals.
| Information source | Present article | ||||
| Species studied: | Rat | Mouse | Zebra finch | Rat, mouse | Rat |
| Typical active lifetime | 21 days or >42 days | 10 h | 12 days | Indefinite | 21–35 days |
| Battery | Ag-Ag2O (2) | Ag-Ag2O (3) | Li (2): ML621+614 | None (inductive) | Ag-Ag2O (2) |
| Tunneled lead to head | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Output range | 20–100 μA | 20–100 μA | 10–1000 μA | 100–500 μA | 50–600 μA |
| Compliance | 34 V | 4.65 V | 5 V | 5 V | 12 V |
| Independent channels | 1 | 2 | 4 | 1 | 2 |
| Frequency | 8, 16, or 24 Hz | 131 Hz | Large range | 50–5000 Hz | 131 Hz |
| Pulse width | 100–1000 μs | 60 μs, fixed | 180 μs/phase, fixed | 25–250 μs/phase | 52 μs, fixed |
| Biphasic | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Control medium | Magnet | Magnet | Electromagnetic | Induction coil | Electromagnetic |
| Functions controlled | Various | On/off | Various | Various | Various |
| Output medium | Infrared | Infrared | Visible LED | Visible LED | Electromagnetic |
| Status readout | Program variables | On/off, saturated | On/off | On/off | Program variables |
| Length, width, height (in mm) of main device | 15, 8, 4 or 18, 8, 7 | 30 × 8 (diameter) | 13, 13, 17 | 14, 12, 16 (mouse version) | 38, 20, 13 |
| Weight (g) | 2.0 | 2.1 | 1.3 | 2.5 (mouse version) | 13 |
Estimated from photographic scale.