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Origami-inspired soft fluidic actuation for minimally invasive large-area electrocorticography.

Lawrence ColesDomenico VentrellaAlejandro Carnicer-LombarteAlberto ElmiJoseph TroughtonMassimo MarielloSalim El HadweBen J WoodingtonMaria Laura BacciGeorge G MalliarasDamiano Giuseppe BaroneChristopher M Proctor
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Electrocorticography is an established neural interfacing technique wherein an array of electrodes enables large-area recording from the cortical surface. Electrocorticography is commonly used for seizure mapping however the implantation of large-area electrocorticography arrays is a highly invasive procedure, requiring a craniotomy larger than the implant area to place the device. In this work, flexible thin-film electrode arrays are combined with concepts from soft robotics, to realize a large-area electrocorticography device that can change shape via integrated fluidic actuators. We show that the 32-electrode device can be packaged using origami-inspired folding into a compressed state and implanted through a small burr-hole craniotomy, then expanded on the surface of the brain for large-area cortical coverage. The implantation, expansion, and recording functionality of the device is confirmed in-vitro and in porcine in-vivo models. The integration of shape actuation into neural implants provides a clinically viable pathway to realize large-area neural interfaces via minimally invasive surgical techniques.
Keyphrases
  • minimally invasive
  • high density
  • high resolution
  • solid state
  • robot assisted
  • mass spectrometry
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • resting state
  • blood brain barrier
  • brain injury