Hungarian Brain Research Program(2017-1.2.1-NKP-2017-00002) Támogató: NKFIH
European Research Council (ERC)(682426,)
(KFI-2018-00097)
(VKE-2018-00032)
European Research Council(712821-NEURAM)
(ÚNKP-20-3)
(ÚNKP-20-3-II-PPKE-28)
Szakterületek:
Anyagtudományi / Anyagtechnológiai folyamatok
Thiol‐ene/acrylate, a softening polymer material, rapidly gained attention during
the past few years as a substrate of intracortical probes, as soft polymers can mitigate
foreign body response by reducing mechanical mismatch between the neural implant and
the surrounding brain tissue. This paper presents a comprehensive analysis of a thiol‐ene/acrylate
based microECoG (micro – electrocorticography, μECoG) device with 31 sputtered iridium
oxide electrodes. Long‐term electrochemical measurements provide firm evidence on
the reliability of the novel layer structure and the related packaging method. In
vivo impedance measurements indicated stable electrode yield (over 75%), without apparent
signs of delamination or material degradation over 75 days. Awake recordings of theta
oscillations with signal‐to‐noise ratio between 1.04 and 5.74 over this extended period
also confirmed the applicability of the device. Chronic immune response characterized
by Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein staining of astrocytes and fluorescent Nissl (NeuroTrace)
staining of neurons revealed only modest foreign body reaction after 80 days of implantation.
The study presents novel data that confirms the feasibility of softening polymer‐based
μECoG devices as chronically implantable neural interfaces.