Title: Neuroprosthetics
1Neuroprosthetics
- Presentation 2
- Implant Technologies
2Implantation Technologies
- Types of Augmentation technologies
- Restorative- restore lost functions and replace
lost organs and limbs - Normalising- restore some creature to
indistinguishable normality - Reconfiguring- creating post-human creatures
equal to but different from humans - Enhancing- the aim of most military / industrial
research
3Restorative Application
Invasive vs. Non-invasive
4Nervous System
The basic unit of the nervous system is the
neuron, or nerve cell, which transmits signals
between the CNS and receptors (senses) and
effectors (muscles, glands, etc) in other parts
of the body
5Nerve Tissue
- Multipolar (motor function or within the CNS),
Bipolar (sensory e.g. retina), Unipolar
(sensory), Pyrimidal (within the brain only) - The axon from a single nerve cell is sometimes
referred to as a nerve fibre, and can be over a
meter in length - Many nerve fibres stream together to form a nerve
or nerve fascicle - several fascicles may then
coalesce to form a larger nerve trunk - A nerve contains several tens of thousands of
single nerve fibres of different diameters
typically between 2 and 20 µm
6Nerve Tissue
- Nerves have three distinct connective tissue
coats - The epineurium is the outermost sheath of a nerve
fascicle and consists of dense connective tissue.
It also fills the spaces in-between the nerve
fascicles and acts as a highway for capillaries
and veins to enter the nerve - A perineurium surrounds each nerve fascicle and
consists of several concentric layers of
flattened cells. These cells are joined together
laterally by tight junctions which serve as a
diffusion barrier to larger molecules - The endoneurium is found within the nerve
fascicle and consists of a thin matrix of fibres
which surround the axon cylinders
7Neuroprosthesis
8Neuroprosthesis
9Neurons
Three functional classes of Neuron
- Afferent Neurons
- Transmit information into the CNS from receptors
at their peripheral endings - The cell body and axon is outside the CNS
- They have NO dendrites
10Neurons
Three functional classes of Neuron
- Interneurons
- Integrate groups of afferent and efferent
neurons into reflex circuits - Are entirely within the CNS
- Account for 99 of all neurons
11Neurons
Three functional classes of Neuron
- Efferent Neurons
- Transmit information out of the CNS to effector
cells - The cell body and dendrites are inside the CNS
- The axon is outside the CNS
12Efferent Neurons
Efferent neurons are subdivided Somatic Nervous
System Made up of all the nerve fibres going
from the CNS to skeletal-muscle cells Autonomic
Nervous System The efferent innervation of all
tissues other than the skeletal muscle
Because activity in the somatic neurons leads to
contraction of the innervated skeletal muscle
cells, these neurons are called Motor Neurons
13Nerve Communication
Action Potentials
When a neuron is not being stimulated, it is at
its Resting Potential If a sudden rise pushes
the membrane potential above the Threshold Value,
(usually 55mV), depolarisation spontaneously
occurs (Initiation) and an action potential is
generated Action potentials occur maximally or
not at all (All-or-None Response) Under normal
conditions the duration and magnitude is always
the same
Central to all nervous systems are the action
potentials, nerve signals that are generated in
response to stimuli or to control motor units
14(Peripheral) Neuroprosthesis
- Recording of neural activity
- From Afferent or Efferent Neurons
- Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES)
- Artificial stimulation of Efferent Neurons
- e.g. Stimulation of the sacral roots for bladder
function - Hand grasp for tetraplegic patients
- Ambulation for paraplegic individuals
- Sensory electrical stimulation
- Artificial stimulation of Afferent Neurons
- e.g. Cochlear implants
- Taste / Smell / Vision / Touch . . .
- Example Closed-loop ambulation control using
natural sensors (i.e. glabrous skin
mechanoreceptors)
15Electrodes (intraneural)
Interfacing methods MicroElectrode Array
(MEA) This technique provides highly selective
recording of individual responses of sensory and
motor neurons within the nerve fascicles Radius
of electrode tip is approximately 1-3 µm. The
active electrode region is approximately 50-80 µm
long Inserted into the nerve tissue during open
surgery
16Signal Processing
17Implementation
Fully implanted vs External?