A METHOD FOR EVALUATING THE SELECTIVITY OF ELECTRODES IMPLANTED FOR NERVE SIMULATION IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING Liang, D. H., Kovacs, G. T., Storment, C. W., White, R. L. 1991; 38 (5): 443-449

Abstract

The scale of stimulating electrodes possible for use in functional electrical stimulation to restore motor and sensory function is rapidly approaching that of individual neurons. Although the electrodes may approach the dimensions of single nerve cells, it is unclear if the region of excitation elicited by each electrode will be correspondingly small. Previous techniques for evaluating this have either been tedious or have lacked the resolution necessary. This paper describes a method that uses the refractory interaction of the compound action potentials elicited by a stimulus pulse pair, along with high-resolution recording of those potentials, to achieve measurements of the selectivity of stimulation down to the scale of a few axon diameters. The feasibility of this technique is demonstrated in sciatic nerves of frogs (Rana Catesbiana) acutely implanted with a sapphire electrode array.

View details for Web of Science ID A1991FP65500007

View details for PubMedID 1874526