posted on 2023-06-20, 13:06authored byDingchang Lin, Jung Min Lee, Chonghe Wang, Hong-Gyu Park, Charles M. Lieber
Spinal cord neuromodulation can restore partial to complete
loss
of motor functions associated with neuromotor disease and trauma.
Current technologies have made substantial progress but have limitations
as dorsal epidural or intraspinal devices that are either remote to
ventral motor neurons or subject to surgical intervention in the spinal
tissue. Here, we describe a flexible and stretchable spinal stimulator
design with nanoscale thickness that can be implanted by minimally
invasive injection through a polymeric catheter to target the ventral
spinal space of mice. Ventrolaterally implanted devices exhibited
substantially lower stimulation threshold currents and more precise
recruitment of motor pools than did comparable dorsal epidural implants.
Functionally relevant and novel hindlimb movements were achieved via
specific stimulation patterns of the electrodes. This approach holds
translational potential for improving controllable limb function following
spinal cord injury or neuromotor disease.