Dermal Sensory Regenerative Peripheral Nerve Interface for Reestablishing Sensory Nerve Feedback in Peripheral Afferents in the Rat

Author:

Sando Ian C.1,Adidharma Widya2,Nedic Andrej2,Ursu Daniel C.2,Mays Elizabeth A.2,Hu Yaxi3,Kubiak Carrie A.2,Sugg Kristoffer B.2,Kung Theodore A.2,Cederna Paul S.2,Gerling Gregory J.4,Kemp Stephen W. P.2,Urbanchek Melanie G.2

Affiliation:

1. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Ascension St. Vincent Medical Group

2. Section of Plastic Surgery, University of Michigan Health System

3. University Medical Center Groningen

4. Systems and Engineering, University of Virginia.

Abstract

Background: Without meaningful, intuitive sensory feedback, even the most advanced myoelectric devices require significant cognitive demand to control. The dermal sensory regenerative peripheral nerve interface (DS-RPNI) is a biological interface designed to establish high-fidelity sensory feedback from prosthetic limbs. Methods: DS-RPNIs were constructed in rats by securing fascicles of residual sensory peripheral nerves into autologous dermal grafts, with the objectives of confirming regeneration of sensory afferents within DS-RPNIs and establishing the reliability of afferent neural response generation with either mechanical or electrical stimulation. Results: Two months after implantation, DS-RPNIs were healthy and displayed well-vascularized dermis with organized axonal collaterals throughout and no evidence of neuroma. Electrophysiologic signals were recorded proximal from DS-RPNI’s sural nerve in response to both mechanical and electrical stimuli and compared with (1) full-thickness skin, (2) deepithelialized skin, and (3) transected sural nerves without DS-RPNI. Mechanical indentation of DS-RPNIs evoked compound sensory nerve action potentials (CSNAPs) that were like those evoked during indentation of full-thickness skin. CSNAP firing rates and waveform amplitudes increased in a graded fashion with increased mechanical indentation. Electrical stimuli delivered to DS-RPNIs reliably elicited CSNAPs at low current thresholds, and CSNAPs gradually increased in amplitude with increasing stimulation current. Conclusions: These findings suggest that afferent nerve fibers successfully reinnervate DS-RPNIs, and that graded stimuli applied to DS-RPNIs produce proximal sensory afferent responses similar to those evoked from normal skin. This confirmation of graded afferent signal transduction through DS-RPNI neural interfaces validate DS-RPNI’s potential role of facilitating sensation in human-machine interfacing. Clinical Relevance Statement: The DS-RPNI is a novel biotic-abiotic neural interface that allows for transduction of sensory stimuli into neural signals. It is expected to advance the restoration of natural sensation and development of sensorimotor control in prosthetics.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Surgery

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