Spatially selective stimulation of the pig vagus nerve to modulate target effect versus side effect

Author:

Blanz Stephan LORCID,Musselman Eric DORCID,Settell Megan LORCID,Knudsen Bruce EORCID,Nicolai Evan NORCID,Trevathan James KORCID,Verner Ryan S,Begnaud Jason,Skubal Aaron C,Suminski Aaron J,Williams Justin C,Shoffstall Andrew JORCID,Grill Warren MORCID,Pelot Nicole AORCID,Ludwig Kip AORCID

Abstract

Abstract Electrical stimulation of the cervical vagus nerve using implanted electrodes (VNS) is FDA-approved for the treatment of drug-resistant epilepsy, treatment-resistant depression, and most recently, chronic ischemic stroke rehabilitation. However, VNS is critically limited by the unwanted stimulation of nearby neck muscles—a result of non-specific stimulation activating motor nerve fibers within the vagus. Prior studies suggested that precise placement of small epineural electrodes can modify VNS therapeutic effects, such as cardiac responses. However, it remains unclear if placement can alter the balance between intended effect and limiting side effect. We used an FDA investigational device exemption approved six-contact epineural cuff to deliver VNS in pigs and quantified how epineural electrode location impacts on- and off-target VNS activation. Detailed post-mortem histology was conducted to understand how the underlying neuroanatomy impacts observed functional responses. Here we report the discovery and characterization of clear neuroanatomy-dependent differences in threshold and saturation for responses related to both effect (change in heart rate) and side effect (neck muscle contractions). The histological and electrophysiological data were used to develop and validate subject-specific computation models of VNS, creating a well-grounded quantitative framework to optimize electrode location-specific activation of nerve fibers governing intended effect versus unwanted side effect.

Funder

LivaNova USA Inc

Funding from NIH SPARC Program

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biomedical Engineering

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