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Fully bioresorbable hybrid opto-electronic neural implant system for simultaneous electrophysiological recording and optogenetic stimulationopen access

Authors
Cho, MyeongkiHan, Jeong-KyuSuh, JungminKim, Jeong JinRyu, Jae RyunMin, In SikSang, MingyuLim, SelinKim, Tae SooKim, KyubeenKang, KyowonHwang, KyuhyunKim, KanghwanHong, Eun-BinNam, Min-HoKim, JongbaegSong, Young MinLee, Gil JuCho, Il-JooYu, Ki Jun
Issue Date
Mar-2024
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Nature Communications, v.15, no.1
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Nature Communications
Volume
15
Number
1
URI
https://scholarworks.korea.ac.kr/kumedicine/handle/2021.sw.kumedicine/65986
DOI
10.1038/s41467-024-45803-0
ISSN
2041-1723
Abstract
Bioresorbable neural implants based on emerging classes of biodegradable materials offer a promising solution to the challenges of secondary surgeries for removal of implanted devices required for existing neural implants. In this study, we introduce a fully bioresorbable flexible hybrid opto-electronic system for simultaneous electrophysiological recording and optogenetic stimulation. The flexible and soft device, composed of biodegradable materials, has a direct optical and electrical interface with the curved cerebral cortex surface while exhibiting excellent biocompatibility. Optimized to minimize light transmission losses and photoelectric artifact interference, the device was chronically implanted in the brain of transgenic mice and performed to photo-stimulate the somatosensory area while recording local field potentials. Thus, the presented hybrid neural implant system, comprising biodegradable materials, promises to provide monitoring and therapy modalities for versatile applications in biomedicine. Bioresorbable neural implants offer a promising solution to the challenges of secondary surgeries required for the removal of implanted devices. Here, the authors introduce a fully bioresorbable flexible hybrid opto-electronic system for simultaneous electrophysiological recording and optogenetic stimulation.
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1. Basic Science > Department of Anatomy > 1. Journal Articles
3. Graduate School > Biomedical Research Center > 1. Journal Articles

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