A wireless optoelectronic probe to monitor oxygenation in deep brain tissue

Real-time detection of tissue oxygenation in the nervous system is crucial in neuroscience studies and clinical diagnostics. Complementary to blood oxygenation levels, the partial pressure of oxygen in brain tissue ( p bt O 2 ) plays a key role in regulating local neural activities and metabolism. H...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature photonics 2024-05, Vol.18 (5), p.492-500
Hauptverfasser: Cai, Xue, Zhang, Haijian, Wei, Penghu, Liu, Quanlei, Sheng, Dawid, Li, Zhen, Zhang, Bozhen, Tang, Guo, Zhao, Wenxin, Ye, Zhongyin, Xue, Zhao, Xie, Yang, Dai, Yang, Wang, Changming, Wang, Yuqi, Fu, Xin, Yin, Lan, Peng, Hongshang, Ding, He, Zhao, Guoguang, Sheng, Xing
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Real-time detection of tissue oxygenation in the nervous system is crucial in neuroscience studies and clinical diagnostics. Complementary to blood oxygenation levels, the partial pressure of oxygen in brain tissue ( p bt O 2 ) plays a key role in regulating local neural activities and metabolism. Here we develop an implantable optoelectronic probe that wirelessly and continuously monitors p bt O 2 signals in the deep brain of freely moving rodents. The thin-film, microscale implant integrates a light-emitting diode and a photodetector, and is coated with an oxygen-sensitive phosphorescent film. Powered by a battery or an inductive coil, a miniaturized circuit is capable of recording and wirelessly transmitting p bt O 2 signals. The wireless micro-probe captures cerebral hypoxia states in mice in various scenarios, including altered inspired oxygen concentrations and acute ischaemia. In mouse models with seizures, the micro-probe associates temporal p bt O 2 variations in multiple brain regions with electrical stimulations applied to the hippocampus. Our probe and method offer important insights into neuroscience studies regarding neurometabolic coupling and pave the way for the clinical application of implantable wireless optoelectronic probes. A wireless optoelectronic probe integrates a microscale light-emitting diode and a photodetector coated with oxygen-sensitive dyes to monitor the partial pressure of oxygen in the deep brain of freely moving mice.
ISSN:1749-4885
1749-4893
DOI:10.1038/s41566-023-01374-y