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Transient Optical Nerve Stimulation (Concepts and Methodology of Pulsed Infrared Laser Stimulation of Peipheral Nerve In Vivo) 허 정 2011.05.31. Special thanks to Sang-Kyung Kim & Sung-Jun Kwon Contents 1. Introduction 1) Limitation of Standard Electrical Nerve Stimulation 2) Definition of Optical Stimulation 3) Previous Work in Optical Stimulation 2. Optical Stimulation 1) Introduction to the Feasibility, Methodology and Physiological Validity 2) Generation of an Artifact-Free Nerve Potential Recording 3) Spatial Selectivity in Optical Stimulation 4) Threshold for Stimulation Dependence on Wavelength 3. Mechanism 4. Impact : Application & Future Direction Page 2 1. Introduction Page 3 1.1. Limitations of Standard Electrical Nerve Stimulation Electrical Stimulation – Standard method for excitation of nerve tissue – Clinically diagnostics and therapeutics – Conceptual understanding of action potential propagation/signaling and even nerve regeneration Limitation – Physical contact with a metal electrode → tissue damage – Inadequate spatial precision of stimulation due to the size of electrode – Spread of electrical current → population response → poor spatial specificity – Stimulation artifact Page 4 1.2. Definition of Optical Stimulation Direct induction of an evoked potential in response to a transient targeted deposition of optical enery Continuous wave(X) → Pulsed source(O) Direct incident of light in the neural tissue resulting in an evoked potential from the neural tissue Laser applications(not optical stimulation) – Using lasers relies on high energy effect (tissue ablation, photoacoustic wave generation) – Low power laser application (LLLT : modulate biologycal process such as inflammation and cell proliferation) Page 5 1.3. Previous Work in Optical Stimulation Optical stimulation(488nm blue laser) was first reported as action potentials generated in Alpysia neurons through a reversible mechanism (Fork, 1971) Page 6 1.3. Previous Work in Optical Stimulation A bundle of central nervous fibers was excited in the rat with a short pulse (40 ns) of UV light produced by an excimer laser. Evoked responses were recorded in the thalamic VPN after stimulation of the medial lemniscus or the cuneate bundle in the spinal cord. recording Stimulation Page 7 2. Optical Stimulation Contact-free, damage-free, artifact-free stimulation The stimulation threshold (0.3 to 0.4 J/cm2) at optimal wavelengths in the infrared (1.87, 2.1, 4.0μm) is at least two times less than the threshold at which any histological tissue damage occurs (0.8 to 1.0 J/cm2) Fundamental advantages of Optical Stimulation – The precision of optically delivered energy – No stimulation artifact – Noncontact fashion Page 8 2.1. Introduction to the Feasibility, Methodology, and Physiological Validity Holmium:YAG Laser Wavelength : 2.12μm Pulse duration : 350μs 400~600μm diameter Page 9 2.1. Introduction to the Feasibility, Methodology, and Physiological Validity Consistent evoked potential was recorded Light is responsible for CNAP and CMAP Both signal were lost when optical energy was blocked with shutter Stimulation was due to only the light Application of depolarizing neuromuscular blocker(succinylcholine) resulted in loss of CMAP Normal propagation of impulse from nerve to muscle CNAP : Compound Nerve Action Potential CMAP : Compound Muscle Action Potential Page 10 2.2. Generation of an Artifact-Free Nerve Potential Recording Standard peripheral nerve stimulation – Stimulation & Recording in the same domain, through electrical means Artifact – Inherent to any electrically stimulated nerve – Much greater than the physiological signal – Obscure measurement of the physiological signal Page 11 2.2. Generation of an Artifact-Free Nerve Potential Recording 0.6ms 1.8ms Electrical stimulation → artifact Optical stimulation → no artifact 2.5ms artifact Distance from stimulation to recording in nerve – 22 mm Two peaks following the laser stimulus artifact – First peak (fast conducting fibers) conduction velocity : 36.7 m/s – Second peak (slower conducting fibers) conduction velocity : 8.8 m/s Page 12 2.3. Spatial Selectivity in Optical Stimulation Electrical stimulation – Unconfined spread far from the electrode – Injected current increase Volume of the affected tissue increase – The greater the energy applied, the more fibers recruited – Limitation : Spatial selectivity Page 13 2.3. Spatial Selectivity in Optical Stimulation Optical stimulation (Laser) – Precise control – Quantifiable volume of action in biological tissue Variable Parameter – Wavelength(penetration depth) – Spot size – Laser radiant exposure Page 14 2.3. Spatial Selectivity in Optical Stimulation Wavelength – Penetration depth of photon – Depth of axons recruited in optical stimulation Small spot size & Lack of radial diffusion – Stimulation on extremely small area More selective excitation of fascicles Parameters can be optimized for efficient stimulation of any tissue geometry Page 15 2.3. Spatial Selectivity in Optical Stimulation Difference in selective activation for electrical vs. optical stimulation – CMAP recording electrode • Gastrocnemius • Biceps femoris Lateral gastrocnemius muscle Page 16 2.3. Spatial Selectivity in Optical Stimulation Electrical stimulation – Simultaneous response within gastrocnemius & Biceps femoris – Stimulation of neighboring muscle – Poor selectivity – Excitation of the entire nerve – Twitch response from all innervated muscles Page 17 2.3. Spatial Selectivity in Optical Stimulation Optical stimulation at threshold – No response observed in the biceps femoris – Extremely precise stimulation of individual fascicles – Increasing optical energy linear increase in recruitment of axons Page 18 2.4. Threshold for Stimulation Dependence on Wavelength Tissue characteristic – Refractive index – Wavelength-dependent coefficients of absorption and scattering Laser parameter – Wavelength – Exposure time – Laser power – Applied energy – Spot size – Radiant exposure (energy/unit area) – Irradiance (power/unit area) Page 19 2.4. Threshold for Stimulation Dependence on Wavelength Light is treated as photons – biological tissue is an inhomogeneous mix of compounds, many with unknown properties – the opportunity to apply probabilistic approaches that lend themselves particularly well to numerical solutions that are manageable in computer simulations Photons in a turbid medium (such as tissue) – moves randomly in all directions – absorbed (described by its absorption coefficient μa[m-1]) • Converted to heat, trigger a chemical reaction, or cause fluorescence emission • Without absorption, there is no energy transfer to the tissue and the tissue is left unaffected by the light – scattered (described by its scattering coefficient μs[m-1]) • Bumps into a particle and changes direction but continues to exist and has the same energy • Negligible relative to absorption Page 20 2.4. Threshold for Stimulation Dependence on Wavelength Chromophores – Molecules that absorb light are called chromophores – Water is the major chromophore in the peripheral nerve • In the IR, tissue absorption is dominated by water absorption Page 21 2.4. Threshold for Stimulation Dependence on Wavelength E(z), the irradiance through some distance z of the medium – Irradiance [W/m2] • how much light made it to a certain point in the tissue • Does not mean how much of that light is absorbed at that point. – Light intensity in a material decays exponentially with depth (z) – E0, the incident irradiance [W/m2] – μa(λ), the wavelength-dependent absorption coefficient. Page 22 2.4. Threshold for Stimulation Dependence on Wavelength Power density [W/m3], rate of heat generation (S) – the number of photons absorbed per unit volume [W/m3], which can be related to amount of heat generated – μa, the probability of absorption of the light at the point Page 23 2.4. Threshold for Stimulation Dependence on Wavelength Once the power density S(z) [W/m3] is known, the energy density Q(z) [J/m3] is easily calculated by multiplying the power density by the exposure duration, Δt Laser induced temporature rise – ρ is the density [kg/m3] and c is the specific heat [J/kg•K] of the irradiated material Page 24 2.4. Threshold for Stimulation Dependence on Wavelength Appropriate wavelengths for stimulation depend on the tissue geometry of the target tissue For selective stimulation of individual fascicles within the main nerve, the penetration depth of the laser must be… – greater than the thickness of the outer protective tissue (200 μm) – in between the thickness of the underlying fascicle (penetration depth of 300 to 500 μm) – the typical fascicle thickness is constant (between 200 and 400 μm) Page 25 2.4. Threshold for Stimulation Dependence on Wavelength FEL(Free Electron Laser) : continuously tunable pulsed infrared laser – operates in the 2- to 10-μm IR region – emits a pulse with a duration of 5 μs – excellent for… • gathering experimental data – provide guidance for the design of an appropriate and optimized optical nerve stimulation • exploring the wavelength dependence of the interaction – not easy to use, not clinically viable Page 26 2.4. Threshold for Stimulation Dependence on Wavelength Page 27 3. Mechanism Mechanism is largely unanswered Unraveling these mechanisms is still in its infancy Three main interaction mechanisms(hypothesis) 1) Photochemical 2) Photothermal 3) Photomechanical Page 28 3. Mechanism : Photochemical Light can induce chemical effects and reactions within macromolecules or tissue Photosynthesis Photodynamic therapy Caged compound Biostimulation But photochemaical phenomenin is not responsible because infrared photon energy is too low for a direct photochemical effect of laser-tissue interactions. Page 29 3. Mechanism : Photomechanical The change in the shape of a material when it is exposed to light The most common mechanism of the photomechanical effect is lightinduced heating (Thermoelastic expansion) Pressure wave generation from rapid heating leads to optical stimulation? Laser-induced pressure waves are not implicated in the optical stimulation mechanism Page 30 3. Mechanism : Photothermal Through the process of elimination, we have arrived at the hypothesis that laser stimulation of neural tissue is mediated by some photothermal process resulting from transient irradiation of peripheral nerves using infrared light Including a large group of interaction types resulting from the transfomation of absorbed light energy to heat Be mediated primarily by absorption of optical energy Depending on the duration and peak value of the temperature achieved, different effects such as coagulation, vaporization, melting, or carbonization may be distinguished Page 31 3. Mechanism : Photothermal Page 32 4. Impact : Application & Future direction Peripheral nerve surgery – confine the stimulation easily to segments of a nerve without requiring separation between the intended area to be stimulated and other areas Surgeries involving cranial nerves – precise functional testing, such as differentiating nerve tissue from tumor in small areas Auditory nerve stimulation – significantly enhanced with a larger number of distinct stimulation sites along the cochlea Chronic implantion – Longer tissue stability, safe interface materials Page 33 4. Impact : Application & Future direction large, cumbersome, and expensive laboratory laser sources Page 34 simple, user-friendly, portable, reliable, and low-cost device Thanks for listening