Intracortical Somatosensory Stimulation to Elicit Fingertip Sensations in an Individual With Spinal Cord Injury

Author:

Fifer Matthew StephenORCID,McMullen David PORCID,Osborn Luke EORCID,Thomas Tessy MORCID,Christie Breanne PORCID,Nickl Robert W,Candrea Daniel N,Pohlmeyer Eric AORCID,Thompson Margaret C,Anaya Manuel Alejandro,Schellekens WouterORCID,Ramsey Nick FORCID,Bensmaia Sliman JORCID,Anderson William S,Wester Brock AORCID,Crone Nathan EORCID,Celnik Pablo A,Cantarero Gabriela LORCID,Tenore Francesco VORCID

Abstract

Background and Objectives:The restoration of touch to fingers and fingertips is critical to achieving dexterous neuroprosthetic control for individuals with sensorimotor dysfunction. However, localized fingertip sensations have not been evoked via intracortical microstimulation (ICMS).Methods:Using a novel intraoperative mapping approach, we implanted electrode arrays in the finger areas of left and right somatosensory cortex and delivered ICMS over a 2-year period in a human participant with spinal cord injury.Results:Stimulation evoked tactile sensations in 8 fingers, including fingertips, spanning both hands. Evoked percepts followed expected somatotopic arrangements. The subject was able to reliably identify up to 7 finger-specific sites spanning both hands in a finger discrimination task. The size of the evoked percepts was on average 33% larger than a fingerpad, as assessed via manual markings of a hand image. The size of the evoked percepts increased modestly with increased stimulation intensity, growing 21% as pulse amplitude increased from 20µA to 80µA. Detection thresholds were estimated on a subset of electrodes, with estimates of 9.2-35µA observed, roughly consistent with prior studies.Discussion:These results suggest that ICMS can enable the delivery of consistent and localized fingertip sensations during object manipulation by neuroprostheses for individuals with somatosensory deficits.Clinical Trial Information:This study is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov with identifier NCT03161067.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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