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Emerging trends in the development of flexible optrode arrays for electrophysiology

Optical-electrode (optrode) arrays use light to modulate excitable biological tissues and/or transduce bioelectrical signals into the optical domain. Light offers several advantages over electrical wiring, including the ability to encode multiple data channels within a single beam. This approach is...

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Autores principales: Almasri, Reem M., Ladouceur, François, Mawad, Damia, Esrafilzadeh, Dorna, Firth, Josiah, Lehmann, Torsten, Poole-Warren, Laura A., Lovell, Nigel H., Al Abed, Amr
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AIP Publishing LLC 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10491464/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37692375
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0153753
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author Almasri, Reem M.
Ladouceur, François
Mawad, Damia
Esrafilzadeh, Dorna
Firth, Josiah
Lehmann, Torsten
Poole-Warren, Laura A.
Lovell, Nigel H.
Al Abed, Amr
author_facet Almasri, Reem M.
Ladouceur, François
Mawad, Damia
Esrafilzadeh, Dorna
Firth, Josiah
Lehmann, Torsten
Poole-Warren, Laura A.
Lovell, Nigel H.
Al Abed, Amr
author_sort Almasri, Reem M.
collection PubMed
description Optical-electrode (optrode) arrays use light to modulate excitable biological tissues and/or transduce bioelectrical signals into the optical domain. Light offers several advantages over electrical wiring, including the ability to encode multiple data channels within a single beam. This approach is at the forefront of innovation aimed at increasing spatial resolution and channel count in multichannel electrophysiology systems. This review presents an overview of devices and material systems that utilize light for electrophysiology recording and stimulation. The work focuses on the current and emerging methods and their applications, and provides a detailed discussion of the design and fabrication of flexible arrayed devices. Optrode arrays feature components non-existent in conventional multi-electrode arrays, such as waveguides, optical circuitry, light-emitting diodes, and optoelectronic and light-sensitive functional materials, packaged in planar, penetrating, or endoscopic forms. Often these are combined with dielectric and conductive structures and, less frequently, with multi-functional sensors. While creating flexible optrode arrays is feasible and necessary to minimize tissue–device mechanical mismatch, key factors must be considered for regulatory approval and clinical use. These include the biocompatibility of optical and photonic components. Additionally, material selection should match the operating wavelength of the specific electrophysiology application, minimizing light scattering and optical losses under physiologically induced stresses and strains. Flexible and soft variants of traditionally rigid photonic circuitry for passive optical multiplexing should be developed to advance the field. We evaluate fabrication techniques against these requirements. We foresee a future whereby established telecommunications techniques are engineered into flexible optrode arrays to enable unprecedented large-scale high-resolution electrophysiology systems.
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spelling pubmed-104914642023-09-09 Emerging trends in the development of flexible optrode arrays for electrophysiology Almasri, Reem M. Ladouceur, François Mawad, Damia Esrafilzadeh, Dorna Firth, Josiah Lehmann, Torsten Poole-Warren, Laura A. Lovell, Nigel H. Al Abed, Amr APL Bioeng Reviews Optical-electrode (optrode) arrays use light to modulate excitable biological tissues and/or transduce bioelectrical signals into the optical domain. Light offers several advantages over electrical wiring, including the ability to encode multiple data channels within a single beam. This approach is at the forefront of innovation aimed at increasing spatial resolution and channel count in multichannel electrophysiology systems. This review presents an overview of devices and material systems that utilize light for electrophysiology recording and stimulation. The work focuses on the current and emerging methods and their applications, and provides a detailed discussion of the design and fabrication of flexible arrayed devices. Optrode arrays feature components non-existent in conventional multi-electrode arrays, such as waveguides, optical circuitry, light-emitting diodes, and optoelectronic and light-sensitive functional materials, packaged in planar, penetrating, or endoscopic forms. Often these are combined with dielectric and conductive structures and, less frequently, with multi-functional sensors. While creating flexible optrode arrays is feasible and necessary to minimize tissue–device mechanical mismatch, key factors must be considered for regulatory approval and clinical use. These include the biocompatibility of optical and photonic components. Additionally, material selection should match the operating wavelength of the specific electrophysiology application, minimizing light scattering and optical losses under physiologically induced stresses and strains. Flexible and soft variants of traditionally rigid photonic circuitry for passive optical multiplexing should be developed to advance the field. We evaluate fabrication techniques against these requirements. We foresee a future whereby established telecommunications techniques are engineered into flexible optrode arrays to enable unprecedented large-scale high-resolution electrophysiology systems. AIP Publishing LLC 2023-09-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10491464/ /pubmed/37692375 http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0153753 Text en © 2023 Author(s). https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/All article content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ).
spellingShingle Reviews
Almasri, Reem M.
Ladouceur, François
Mawad, Damia
Esrafilzadeh, Dorna
Firth, Josiah
Lehmann, Torsten
Poole-Warren, Laura A.
Lovell, Nigel H.
Al Abed, Amr
Emerging trends in the development of flexible optrode arrays for electrophysiology
title Emerging trends in the development of flexible optrode arrays for electrophysiology
title_full Emerging trends in the development of flexible optrode arrays for electrophysiology
title_fullStr Emerging trends in the development of flexible optrode arrays for electrophysiology
title_full_unstemmed Emerging trends in the development of flexible optrode arrays for electrophysiology
title_short Emerging trends in the development of flexible optrode arrays for electrophysiology
title_sort emerging trends in the development of flexible optrode arrays for electrophysiology
topic Reviews
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10491464/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37692375
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0153753
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