| Literature DB >> 30882044 |
Yuhao Liu1, Limei Tian2, Milan S Raj3, Matthew Cotton4, Yinji Ma5,6, Siyi Ma1, Bryan McGrane3, Arjun V Pendharkar7, Nader Dahaleh4, Lloyd Olson3, Haiwen Luan6, Orin Block4, Brandon Suleski3, Yadong Zhou6,8, Chandrasekaran Jayaraman9,10, Tyler Koski4, A J Aranyosi3, John A Wright3, Arun Jayaraman9,10, Yonggang Huang6,11, Roozbeh Ghaffari3,11, Michel Kliot4,7, John A Rogers1,11.
Abstract
Peripheral nerves are often vulnerable to damage during surgeries, with risks of significant pain, loss of motor function, and reduced quality of life for the patient. Intraoperative methods for monitoring nerve activity are effective, but conventional systems rely on bench-top data acquisition tools with hard-wired connections to electrode leads that must be placed percutaneously inside target muscle tissue. These approaches are time and skill intensive and therefore costly to an extent that precludes their use in many important scenarios. Here we report a soft, skin-mounted monitoring system that measures, stores, and wirelessly transmits electrical signals and physical movement associated with muscle activity, continuously and in real-time during neurosurgical procedures on the peripheral, spinal, and cranial nerves. Surface electromyography and motion measurements can be performed non-invasively in this manner on nearly any muscle location, thereby offering many important advantages in usability and cost, with signal fidelity that matches that of the current clinical standard of care for decision making. These results could significantly improve accessibility of intraoperative monitoring across a broad range of neurosurgical procedures, with associated enhancements in patient outcomes.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30882044 PMCID: PMC6419749 DOI: 10.1038/s41746-018-0023-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Digit Med ISSN: 2398-6352
Fig. 1Wearable biosensing system in a soft, stretchable design. a Exploded view schematic illustration of the key mechanical and electrical components of the system. b Illustration of the biostamp fully assembled and encapsulated with soft elastomeric materials (scale bar: 1 cm). c Biostamp held in stretched, twisted, and bent geometries. d Simplified cross-sectional schematic of the electronics, core and shell encapsulation layers. e Computational results for interfacial stresses exerted on the skin in response to 20% tensile stretch. The shear and normal stresses vary with the thickness of the core layer (hcore: 0.5, 1.5, 2.5 mm). f Spatial distribution of strain in the circuit components for different levels of uniaxial stretching, for different values of hcore
Fig. 2Comparative analysis of EMG recordings captured using biostamp and standard neurophysiological monitoring equipment. a Anatomical placement of biostamp, surface electrodes, and needle electrodes on the tibialis anterior muscle (scale bar: 1 cm). b Surgical access site exposing the common peroneal nerve (scale bar: 1 cm). c Comparison of stimulation current thresholds for the three monitoring systems determined using the configuration shown in a. d Motion and EMG waveforms recorded with biostamp during direct nerve stimulation
Fig. 3Comparison of the quality of EMG signal from the tibialis anterior muscle group captured using biostamp and conventional equipment (needle electrodes and standard recording electronics) during stimulation of the common peroneal nerve. a Average current thresholds determined using biostamp and conventional equipment in response to stimulation of the peroneal nerve (n = 10 patients). b Bland–Alman analysis of biostamp and conventional equipment (needle, n = 55 subjects) showing data sets falling within +0.18 mA (upper limit: UL) and −0.15 mA (lower limit: LL). c, d EMG signals captured using biostamp and conventional equipment, respectively, for different stimulation currents with patient 1. e Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of EMG signals shown in c and d. f–h show similar data for patient 2. For parts c, d, f, and g, EMG amplitudes (y-axis) correspond to normalized values
Fig. 4Comparison of the quality of EMG signals captured using biostamp and conventional equipment (needle electrodes and standard recording electronics) during spinal and cranial nerve surgeries. a Anatomical placement of biostamp and needle electrodes on the left tibialis anterior muscle (scale bar: 3 cm). b Surgical access site for direct stimulation of exposed left L5 spinal nerve. EMG signals were captured on the left anterior tibialis muscle (scale bar: 1 cm). c Average current thresholds for biostamp and conventional equipment derived from EMG signals from the tibialis anterior muscle. d Anatomical placement of biostamp and needle electrodes on the left facial muscle (scale bar: 2 cm). e Surgical access site for direct stimulation of the exposed facial nerve (scale bar: 5 cm). f Average current thresholds for biostamp and conventional equipment derived from EMG signals from the left facial muscle
Summary of peripheral surgery patient information
| Patient | Stimulated nerve | Recorded muscle | Age | Gender | Surgery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Right tibial nerve | Right tibialis anterior muscle | 52 | F | Decompression of a severe sciatic nerve stretch injury involving primarily the peroneal portion |
| 2 | Distal tibial nerve | Sole of foot muscle | 19 | F | Neurofibroma dissection |
| 3 | Right spinal accessory nerve | Right trapezius muscle | 37 | M | Neurotization with severe right brachial plexus injury |
| 4 | Right common peroneal nerve | Right peroneuslongus muscle | 24 | M | Decompression and neurolysis with severe right common peroneal nerve injury |
| 5 | Right tibial nerve | Right sole of foot muscle | 60 | M | Neurotization with laceration injury to peroneal portion of sciatic nerve in thigh |
| 6 | Right tibial nerve | Right sole of foot muscle | 47 | F | Schwannoma removal from right tibial nerve in the calf |
| 7 | Right C6 spinal nerve | Deltoid muscle | 41 | F | Schwannoma removal from the middle trunk of her right brachial plexus |
| 8 | Left common peroneal nerve | Left tibialis anterior muscle | 48 | M | Decompression of left common peroneal nerve with prior surgeries for treatment of a ganglion cysts |
| 9 | Right common peroneal nerve | Right tibialis anterior muscle | 54 | M | Decompression of right common peroneal nerve with a ganglion cyst |
| 10 | Left posterior interosseous nerve | Finger extensor digitorum muscle | 45 | M | Schwannoma removal from left posterior interosseous nerve |
Summary of spinal surgery patient information
| Patient | Stimulated nerve | Recorded muscle | Age | Gender | Surgery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Scarred right L5 spinal nerve | Tibialis anterior muscle | 30 | M | Right L5/S1 spinal surgeries |
| 2 | Left L5 spinal nerve | Tibialis anterior muscle | 60 | F | Corrective surgery for scoliosis |
| 3 | Left L5 spinal nerve | Tibialis anterior muscle | 69 | F | Lumbar decompression and fusion spine surgery |
| 4 | Scarred left L5 spinal nerve | Tibialis anterior muscle | 57 | M | L4/5 surgeries |
Summary of cranial surgery patient information
| Patient | Stimulated nerve | Recorded muscle | Age | Gender | Surgery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 7th cranial nerve (facial) | Left facial muscle | 43 | M | Removal of left cerebello-pontine angle epidermoid mass |