Functional Enhancement and Characterization of an Electrophysiological Mapping Electrode Probe with Carbonic, Directional Macrocontacts.
Radu C PopaCosmin-Andrei SerbanAndrei BarboricaAna-Maria ZagreanOctavian BuiuNiculae DumbravescuAlexandru-Catalin PaslaruCosmin ObrejaCristina PachiuMarius StoianCatalin MarculescuAntonio RadoiSilviu VulpeMarian IonPublished in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Electrophysiological mapping (EM) using acute electrode probes is a common procedure performed during functional neurosurgery. Due to their constructive specificities, the EM probes are lagging in innovative enhancements. This work addressed complementing a clinically employed EM probe with carbonic and circumferentially segmented macrocontacts that are operable both for neurophysiological sensing ("recording") of local field potentials (LFP) and for test stimulation. This paper illustrates in-depth the development that is based on the direct writing of functional materials. The unconventional fabrication processes were optimized on planar geometry and then transferred to the cylindrically thin probe body. We report and discuss the constructive concept and architecture of the probe, characteristics of the electrochemical interface deduced from voltammetry and chronopotentiometry, and the results of in vitro and in vivo recording and pulse stimulation tests. Two- and three-directional macrocontacts were added on probes having shanks of 550 and 770 μm diameters and 10-23 cm lengths. The graphitic material presents a ~2.7 V wide, almost symmetric water electrolysis window, and an ultra-capacitive charge transfer. When tested with clinically relevant 150 μs biphasic current pulses, the interfacial polarization stayed safely away from the water window for pulse amplitudes up to 9 mA (135 μC/cm 2 ). The in vivo experiments on adult rat models confirmed the high-quality sensing of LFPs. Additionally, the in vivo-prevailing increase in the electrode impedance and overpotential are discussed and modeled by an ionic mobility-reducing spongiform structure; this restricted diffusion model gives new applicative insight into the in vivo-uprisen stimulation overpotential.
Keyphrases
- living cells
- fluorescent probe
- high resolution
- single molecule
- small molecule
- quantum dots
- ionic liquid
- blood pressure
- fluorescence imaging
- carbon nanotubes
- solid state
- gold nanoparticles
- liver failure
- minimally invasive
- high density
- optical coherence tomography
- computed tomography
- molecular dynamics simulations
- mass spectrometry
- drug induced
- photodynamic therapy
- hepatitis b virus
- molecularly imprinted