Summary: Researchers developed innovative, flexible devices that can gently wrap around nerve fibers, potentially transforming the diagnosis and treatment of neurological disorders. These tiny, flexible “nerve cuffs” employ soft robotics and flexible electronics to interface with peripheral nerves without causing damage.
Tested successfully in rats, these cuffs adjust their shape with minimal voltage, eliminating the need for surgical sutures or glues. This breakthrough could lead to less invasive treatments for conditions like epilepsy, chronic pain, and could improve the control of prosthetic limbs.
Author:
- Advanced Materials: The nerve cuffs are made from conducting polymers used in soft robotics, allowing them to expand or contract around nerve fibers with just a few hundred millivolts of electricity.
- Non-Invasive Application: The cuffs can be rolled into a needle and injected near the target nerve, where they then self-adjust to wrap around the nerve, facilitating minimally invasive placement.
- Future Potential: The technology could allow for highly targeted neurological treatments without the need for open surgery and is even envisioned to navigate to hard-to-reach areas inside the body.
Source: University of Cambridge
Researchers have developed tiny, flexible devices that can wrap around individual nerve fibers without damaging them.
The researchers, from the University of Cambridge, combined flexible electronics and soft robotics techniques to develop the devices, which could be used for the diagnosis and treatment of a range of disorders, including epilepsy and chronic pain, or the control of prosthetic limbs.
Current tools for interfacing with the peripheral nerves—the 43 pairs of motor and sensory nerves that connect the brain and the spinal cord—are outdated, bulky and carry a high risk of nerve injury. However, the robotic nerve “cuffs” developed by the Cambridge team are sensitive enough to grasp or wrap around delicate nerve fibers without causing any damage.
Tests of the nerve cuffs in rats showed that the devices only require tiny voltages to change shape in a controlled way, forming a self-closing loop around nerves without the need for surgical sutures or glues.
The researchers say the combination of soft electrical actuators with neurotechnology could be an answer to minimally invasive monitoring and treatment for a range of neurological conditions.
The results are reported in the journal Nature Materials.
Electric nerve implants can be used to either stimulate or block signals in target nerves. For example, they might help relieve pain by blocking pain signals, or they could be used to restore movement in paralyzed limbs by sending electrical signals to the nerves.
Nerve monitoring is also standard surgical procedure when operating in areas of the body containing a high concentration of nerve fibers, such as anywhere near the spinal cord.
These implants allow direct access to nerve fibers, but they come with certain risks. “Nerve implants come with a high risk of nerve injury,” said Professor George Malliaras from Cambridge’s Department of Engineering, who led the research.
“Nerves are small and highly delicate, so anytime you put something large, like an electrode, in contact with them, it represents a danger to the nerves.”
“Nerve cuffs that wrap around nerves are the least invasive implants currently available, but despite this they are still too bulky, stiff and difficult to implant, requiring significant handling and potential trauma to the nerve,” said co-author Dr. Damiano Barone from Cambridge’s Department of Clinical Neurosciences.
The researchers designed a new type of nerve cuff made from conducting polymers, normally used in soft robotics. The ultra-thin cuffs…
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