Title :
Interleaved, multisite electrical stimulation of cat sciatic nerve produces fatigue-resistant, ripple-free motor responses
Author :
McDonnall, Daniel ; Clark, Gregory A. ; Normann, Richard A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Bioeng., Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
fDate :
6/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We studied the use of physiologically based, multisite, intrafascicular electrical stimulation of the sciatic nerve to achieve ripple-free contractions and sustained, fatigue-resistant forces over a physiological range of forces in cat gastrocnemius muscle. Electrode arrays containing 100, 0.5-1.5-mm-long penetrating microelectrodes were inserted into the sciatic nerves of cats, and forces generated by gastrocnemius muscles in response to stimulation of the nerves were monitored via a force transducer attached to the tendons. In single-electrode stimulation, responses evoked by low-frequency [15 pulses/second, (p/s)] stimulation exhibited greater fatigue resistance than did responses evoked by higher frequency stimulation (30 and 60 p/s), but showed far more ripple within each response. We compared interleaved 15 p/s stimulation of four electrodes (100 μs biphasic pulses, 750-ms pulse trains) that produced a net stimulation frequency of 60 p/s with multielectrode 60 p/s quasi-simultaneous stimulation protocols. Across a broad range of forces (10% to 80% of maximum), responses evoked by multielectrode 15 p/s interleaved stimulation exhibited substantially less fatigue than did responses evoked by 60 p/s quasi-simultaneous stimulation, and less ripple than responses evoked by single-electrode 15 p/s stimulation. The effectiveness of this physiologically based stimulation paradigm encourages its application in the field of motor neuroprosthetics.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; microelectrodes; neuromuscular stimulation; prosthetics; 0.5 to 1.5 mm; 100 mus; 750 ms; cat gastrocnemius muscle; cat sciatic nerve; fatigue-resistant ripple-free motor responses; force transducer; microelectrode arrays; motor neuroprosthetics; physiologically based multisite intrafascicular electrical stimulation; ripple-free contractions; sustained fatigue-resistant forces; tendons; Biomedical monitoring; Cats; Electrical stimulation; Electrodes; Fatigue; Frequency; Microelectrodes; Muscles; Tendons; Transducers; Animals; Cats; Electric Stimulation; Electrodes, Implanted; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Microelectrodes; Muscle Contraction; Muscle Fatigue; Muscle, Skeletal; Sciatic Nerve; Stress, Mechanical;
Journal_Title :
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNSRE.2004.828425