| Literature DB >> 32232086 |
R Guduru1,2, P Liang3, M Yousef4, J Horstmyer4, S Khizroev1,2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Neurodegenerative diseases are devastating diagnoses. Examining local electric fields in response to neural activity in real time could shed light on understanding the origins of these diseases. To date, there has not been found a way to directly map these fields without interfering with the electric circuitry of the brain. This theoretical study is focused on a nanotechnology concept to overcome the challenge of brain electric field mapping in real time. The paper shows that coupling the magnetoelectric effect of multiferroic nanoparticles, known as magnetoelectric nanoparticles (MENs), with the ultra-fast and high-sensitivity imaging capability of the recently emerged magnetic particle imaging (MPI) can enable wirelessly conducted electric-field mapping with specifications to meet the requirements for monitoring neural activity in real time.Entities:
Keywords: Brain mapping; Magnetic particle imaging; Magnetoelectric; Nanoparticles; Nanotechnology; Reverse engineering the brain
Year: 2018 PMID: 32232086 PMCID: PMC7098259 DOI: 10.1186/s42234-018-0012-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioelectron Med ISSN: 2332-8886
Fig. 1A schematic illustrating how MENs can be used to detect the electric field due to the neural activity deep in the brain. The exaggerated illustration shows how the magnetic moment of a MEN in the proximity of the membrane can be reversed by flipping the local electric field as the action potential travels by the MEN
Fig. 2Magnetic field response of MNs and MENs depending on the nanoparticle size and local electric field at the micron-size scale. a Mrel (H) for MNs. (b) Mrel (H) for MENs for five different values of the local electric field: E1 = 5, E2 = 10, E3 = 20, E4 = 40, E5 = 100 V/m. The relative magnetization is the ratio of the magnetization and its saturated value
Fig. 3Normalized MPI images taken with MNs and (right) MENs of two different angle views of the frontal lobes of the cerebral cortex. The region with a simulated neuronal firing is highlighted by the dotted circle
Fig. 4Normalized De-modulated MPI-MEN/MPI-MN images of two different angle views of frontal lobes. (Right) The insert shows a detailed normalized 3D field profile in the region of firing
Fig. 5Nanoparticle density dependence of the signal and spatial resolution of MPI with 50-nm MENs