Wireless, fully implantable cardiac stimulation and recording with on-device computation for closed-loop pacing and defibrillation.
Jokubas AusraMicah MadridRose T YinJessica HannaSuzanne M ArnottJaclyn A BrennanRoberto PeraltaDavid Marshall ClausenJakob A BakallIgor R EfimovPhilipp GutrufPublished in: Science advances (2022)
Monitoring and control of cardiac function are critical for investigation of cardiovascular pathophysiology and developing life-saving therapies. However, chronic stimulation of the heart in freely moving small animal subjects, which offer a variety of genotypes and phenotypes, is currently difficult. Specifically, real-time control of cardiac function with high spatial and temporal resolution is currently not possible. Here, we introduce a wireless battery-free device with on-board computation for real-time cardiac control with multisite stimulation enabling optogenetic modulation of the entire rodent heart. Seamless integration of the biointerface with the heart is enabled by machine learning-guided design of ultrathin arrays. Long-term pacing, recording, and on-board computation are demonstrated in freely moving animals. This device class enables new heart failure models and offers a platform to test real-time therapeutic paradigms over chronic time scales by providing means to control cardiac function continuously over the lifetime of the subject.