Open Access
17 April 2023 Development of polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography imaging platform and metrics to quantify electrostimulation-induced peripheral nerve injury in vivo in a small animal model
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Abstract

Significance

Neuromodulation devices are rapidly evolving for the treatment of neurological diseases and conditions. Injury from implantation or long-term use without obvious functional losses is often only detectable through terminal histology. New technologies are needed that assess the peripheral nervous system (PNS) under normal and diseased or injured conditions.

Aim

We aim to demonstrate an imaging and stimulation platform that can elucidate the biological mechanisms and impacts of neurostimulation in the PNS and apply it to the sciatic nerve to extract imaging metrics indicating electrical overstimulation.

Approach

A sciatic nerve injury model in a 15-rat cohort was observed using a newly developed imaging and stimulation platform that can detect electrical overstimulation effects with polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography. The sciatic nerve was electrically stimulated using a custom-developed nerve holder with embedded electrodes for 1 h, followed by a 1-h recovery period, delivered at above-threshold Shannon model k-values in experimental groups: sham control (SC, n = 5, 0.0 mA / 0 Hz), stimulation level 1 (SL1, n = 5, 3.4 mA / 50 Hz, and k = 2.57), and stimulation level 2 (SL2, n = 5, 6.8 mA / 100 Hz, and k = 3.17).

Results

The stimulation and imaging system successfully captured study data across the cohort. When compared to a SC after a 1-week recovery, the fascicle closest to the stimulation lead showed an average change of +4 % / − 309 % (SL1/SL2) in phase retardation and −79 % / − 148 % in optical attenuation relative to SC. Analysis of immunohistochemistry (IHC) shows a +1 % / − 36 % difference in myelin pixel counts and −13 % / + 29 % difference in axon pixel counts, and an overall increase in cell nuclei pixel count of +20 % / + 35 % . These metrics were consistent with IHC and hematoxylin/eosin tissue section analysis.

Conclusions

The poststimulation changes observed in our study are manifestations of nerve injury and repair, specifically degeneration and angiogenesis. Optical imaging metrics quantify these processes and may help evaluate the safety and efficacy of neuromodulation devices.

CC BY: © The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original publication, including its DOI.
Guillermo L. Monroy, Mohsen Erfanzadeh, Michael A. Tao, Damon T. DePaoli, Ilyas Saytashev, Ahhyun Stephanie Nam, Harmain Rafi, Kasey C. Kwong, Katherine Shea, Benjamin J. Vakoc, Srikanth Vasudevan, and Daniel X. Hammer "Development of polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography imaging platform and metrics to quantify electrostimulation-induced peripheral nerve injury in vivo in a small animal model," Neurophotonics 10(2), 025004 (17 April 2023). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.NPh.10.2.025004
Received: 10 August 2022; Accepted: 28 March 2023; Published: 17 April 2023
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KEYWORDS
Nerve

Optical coherence tomography

Coherence imaging

Animals

Nervous system

Biological imaging

Injuries

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