Stimulation and Repair of Peripheral Nerves Using Bioadhesive Graft-Antenna

Adv Sci (Weinh). 2019 Apr 3;6(11):1801212. doi: 10.1002/advs.201801212. eCollection 2019 Jun 5.

Abstract

An original wireless stimulator for peripheral nerves based on a metal loop (diameter ≈1 mm) that is powered by a transcranial magnetic stimulator (TMS) and does not require circuitry components is reported. The loop can be integrated in a chitosan scaffold that functions as a graft when applied onto transected nerves (graft-antenna). The graft-antenna is bonded to rat sciatic nerves by a laser without sutures; it does not migrate after implantation and is able to trigger steady compound muscle action potentials for 12 weeks (CMAP ≈1.3 mV). Eight weeks postoperatively, axon regeneration is facilitated in transected nerves that are repaired with the graft-antenna and stimulated by the TMS for 1 h per week. The graft-antenna is an innovative and minimally-invasive device that functions concurrently as a wireless stimulator and adhesive scaffold for nerve repair.

Keywords: chitosan; lasers; nerve stimulators; photochemical tissue bonding; wireless antenna.