Alice Tor, Stephen E Clarke, Iliana E Bray, Paul Nuyujukian
{"title":"电解损伤后多电极阵列的材料损伤在噪声中。","authors":"Alice Tor, Stephen E Clarke, Iliana E Bray, Paul Nuyujukian","doi":"10.1101/2025.03.26.645429","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>1The quality of stable long-term recordings from chronically implanted electrode arrays is essential for experimental neuroscience and brain-computer interfaces. This work uses scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to image and analyze eight 96-channel Utah arrays previously implanted in motor cortical regions of four subjects (subject H = 2242 days implanted, F = 1875, U = 2680, C = 594), providing important contributions to a growing body of long-term implant research leveraging this imaging technology. Four of these arrays have been used in electrolytic lesioning experiments (H = 10 lesions, F = 1, U = 4, C = 1), a novel electrolytic perturbation technique using small direct currents. In addition to surveying physical damage, such as biological debris and material deterioration, this work also analyzes whether electrolytic lesioning created damage beyond what is typical for these arrays. Each electrode was scored in six damage categories, identified from the literature: abnormal debris, metal coating cracks, silicon tip breakage, parylene C delamination, parylene C cracks, and shank fracture. This analysis confirms previous results that observed damage on explanted arrays is more severe on the outer-edge electrodes versus inner electrodes. These findings also indicate that are no statistically significant differences between the damage observed on normal electrodes versus electrodes used for electrolytic lesioning. This work provides evidence that electrolytic lesioning does not significantly affect the quality of chronically implanted electrode arrays and can be a useful tool in understanding perturbations to neural systems. Finally, this work also includes the largest collection of single-electrode SEM images for previously implanted multielectrode Utah arrays, spanning eleven different intact arrays and one broken array. As the clinical relevance of chronically implanted electrodes with single-neuron resolution continues to grow, these images may be used to provide the foundation for a larger public database and inform further electrode design and analyses.</p>","PeriodicalId":519960,"journal":{"name":"bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-03-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11974832/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Material Damage to Multielectrode Arrays after Electrolytic Lesioning is in the Noise.\",\"authors\":\"Alice Tor, Stephen E Clarke, Iliana E Bray, Paul Nuyujukian\",\"doi\":\"10.1101/2025.03.26.645429\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>1The quality of stable long-term recordings from chronically implanted electrode arrays is essential for experimental neuroscience and brain-computer interfaces. 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This analysis confirms previous results that observed damage on explanted arrays is more severe on the outer-edge electrodes versus inner electrodes. These findings also indicate that are no statistically significant differences between the damage observed on normal electrodes versus electrodes used for electrolytic lesioning. This work provides evidence that electrolytic lesioning does not significantly affect the quality of chronically implanted electrode arrays and can be a useful tool in understanding perturbations to neural systems. Finally, this work also includes the largest collection of single-electrode SEM images for previously implanted multielectrode Utah arrays, spanning eleven different intact arrays and one broken array. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
长期植入电极阵列的稳定长期记录的质量对于实验神经科学和脑机接口至关重要。本研究使用扫描电子显微镜(SEM)对4名受试者(受试者H = 2242天,F = 1875, U = 2680, C = 594)植入的8个96通道犹他阵列进行成像和分析,为利用该成像技术进行长期植入研究提供了重要贡献。其中四个阵列已用于电解损伤实验(H = 10个损伤,F = 1, U = 4, C = 1),这是一种使用小直流电的新型电解扰动技术。除了测量物理损伤,如生物碎片和材料退化,这项工作还分析了电解损伤是否造成了超出这些阵列典型的损伤。每个电极在六个损伤类别中进行评分,从文献中确定:异常碎片,金属涂层裂纹,硅尖端断裂,聚二甲苯C分层,聚二甲苯C裂纹和柄断裂。这一分析证实了先前的结果,即外植体阵列的外边缘电极比内电极的损伤更严重。这些发现还表明,在正常电极上观察到的损伤与用于电解损伤的电极之间没有统计学上的显著差异。这项工作提供的证据表明,电解损伤不会显著影响长期植入电极阵列的质量,可以成为理解神经系统扰动的有用工具。最后,这项工作还包括以前植入的多电极犹他阵列的最大单电极SEM图像集合,跨越11个不同的完整阵列和一个破碎阵列。随着长期植入的单神经元分辨率电极的临床意义不断增加,这些图像可以为更大的公共数据库提供基础,并为进一步的电极设计和分析提供信息。
Material Damage to Multielectrode Arrays after Electrolytic Lesioning is in the Noise.
1The quality of stable long-term recordings from chronically implanted electrode arrays is essential for experimental neuroscience and brain-computer interfaces. This work uses scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to image and analyze eight 96-channel Utah arrays previously implanted in motor cortical regions of four subjects (subject H = 2242 days implanted, F = 1875, U = 2680, C = 594), providing important contributions to a growing body of long-term implant research leveraging this imaging technology. Four of these arrays have been used in electrolytic lesioning experiments (H = 10 lesions, F = 1, U = 4, C = 1), a novel electrolytic perturbation technique using small direct currents. In addition to surveying physical damage, such as biological debris and material deterioration, this work also analyzes whether electrolytic lesioning created damage beyond what is typical for these arrays. Each electrode was scored in six damage categories, identified from the literature: abnormal debris, metal coating cracks, silicon tip breakage, parylene C delamination, parylene C cracks, and shank fracture. This analysis confirms previous results that observed damage on explanted arrays is more severe on the outer-edge electrodes versus inner electrodes. These findings also indicate that are no statistically significant differences between the damage observed on normal electrodes versus electrodes used for electrolytic lesioning. This work provides evidence that electrolytic lesioning does not significantly affect the quality of chronically implanted electrode arrays and can be a useful tool in understanding perturbations to neural systems. Finally, this work also includes the largest collection of single-electrode SEM images for previously implanted multielectrode Utah arrays, spanning eleven different intact arrays and one broken array. As the clinical relevance of chronically implanted electrodes with single-neuron resolution continues to grow, these images may be used to provide the foundation for a larger public database and inform further electrode design and analyses.