Tissue‐Engineered Cochlear Fibrosis Model Links Complex Impedance to Fibrosis Formation for Cochlear Implant Patients

Author:

de Rijk Simone R.12ORCID,Boys Alexander J.13ORCID,Roberts Iwan V.12ORCID,Jiang Chen124ORCID,Garcia Charlotte15ORCID,Owens Róisín M.13ORCID,Bance Manohar12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cambridge Hearing Group Cambridge CB2 8AF UK

2. Department of Clinical Neurosciences University of Cambridge Cambridge CB2 3 EB UK

3. Department of Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology University of Cambridge Cambridge CB3 0AS UK

4. Department of Electronic Engineering Tsinghua University Beijing 100190 P. R. China

5. Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit University of Cambridge Cambridge CB2 7EF UK

Abstract

AbstractCochlear implants are a life‐changing technology for those with severe sensorineural hearing loss, partially restoring hearing through direct electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve. However, they are known to elicit an immune response resulting in fibrotic tissue formation in the cochlea that is linked to residual hearing loss and suboptimal outcomes. Intracochlear fibrosis is difficult to track without postmortem histology, and no specific electrical marker for fibrosis exists. In this study, a tissue‐engineered model of cochlear fibrosis is developed following implant placement to examine the electrical characteristics associated with fibrotic tissue formation around electrodes. The model is characterized using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and an increase in the resistance and a decrease in capacitance of the tissue using a representative circuit are found. This result informs a new marker of fibrosis progression over time that is extractable from voltage waveform responses, which can be directly measured in cochlear implant patients. This marker is tested in a small sample size of recently implanted cochlear implant patients, showing a significant increase over two postoperative timepoints. Using this system, complex impedance is demonstrated as a marker of fibrosis progression that is directly measurable from cochlear implants to enable real‐time tracking of fibrosis formation in patients, creating opportunities for earlier treatment intervention to improve cochlear implant efficacy.

Funder

NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre

Human Frontier Science Program

Evelyn Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Mathematical modeling of cochlear mechanics;Vestnik nevrologii, psihiatrii i nejrohirurgii (Bulletin of Neurology, Psychiatry and Neurosurgery);2024-03-22

2. There and Back Again: Building Systems That Integrate, Interface, and Interact with the Human Body;Advanced Biology;2024-02-24

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