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Functional and Biological Test of a 20 Channel Implantable Stimulator in Sheep in View of Functional Electrical Stimulation Walking for Spinal Cord Injured Persons
Author(s) -
Bijak Manfred,
Mayr Winfried,
Girsch Werner,
Lanmüller Hermann,
Unger Ewald,
Stöhr Hans,
Thoma Herwig,
Plenk Hanns
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
artificial organs
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.684
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1525-1594
pISSN - 0160-564X
DOI - 10.1046/j.1525-1594.2001.025006467.x
Subject(s) - stimulation , functional electrical stimulation , trunk , biomedical engineering , medicine , spinal cord , electrode , implant , femoral nerve , spinal cord stimulation , physical medicine and rehabilitation , anatomy , surgery , chemistry , biology , ecology , psychiatry
A newly developed implantable stimulator with 20 output channels, mainly intended for the stimulation of lower extremities in paraplegics, was implanted in 6 sheep over a time period of 26 weeks. Five epineural electrodes each were used to contact various nerves at different locations to elicit hip and knee extension and flexion and to make carrousel and selective stimulation possible. Different electrode application strategies in view of paraplegic standing and walking were investigated. Additional implanted electrodes allowed M‐wave monitoring for selectivity investigations in 3 sheep. Stimulator, electrode leads, and electrodes proved to be reliable. Selective stimulation with electrodes placed on the trunk of the sciatic nerve could be demonstrated but with bad reproducibility. Histological investigation of the tissues surrounding electrodes and leads showed the expected stable foreign body response. Strong hip and knee extension could be gained in all cases while only weak flexion forces could be elicited in most cases. Muscle biopsies showed that daily stimulation for 8 h at threshold level caused an increase in muscle Type I fibers and a decrease in Type IIc fibers. Implants and electrodes fulfill the most important functional and biological criteria for their clinical application for paraplegic walking. The intention to provide selective flexion functions via epineural stimulation could not be demonstrated sufficiently in this animal model.

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