IEEE transactions on bio-medical engineering
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An advanced multiple channel cochlear implant hearing prosthesis is described. Stimulation is presented through an array of 20 electrodes located in the scala tympani. Any two electrodes can be configured as a bipolar pair to conduct a symmetrical, biphasic, constant-current pulsatile stimulus. ⋯ The device also incorporates a telemetry system that enables electrode voltage waveforms to be monitored externally in real time. The electronics of the implant are contained almost entirely on a custom designed integrated circuit. Preliminary results obtained with the first patient to receive the advanced implant are included.
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IEEE Trans Biomed Eng · Jul 1989
Batch-fabricated thin-film electrodes for stimulation of the central auditory system.
Silicon micromachining and thin-film technology have been employed to fabricate iridium stimulating arrays which can be used to excite discrete volumes of the central nervous system. Silicon multichannel probes with thicknesses ranging from 1 to 40 microns and arbitrary two-dimensional shapes can be fabricated using a high-yield, circuit-compatible process. ⋯ In vivo tests have been performed in the central auditory pathways to demonstrate neural activation using the devices. These tests show a selective activation both as a function of site separation and site size.
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A nerve stimulation model has been developed, incorporating realistic cross-sectional nerve geometries and conductivities. The potential field in the volume conductor was calculated numerically using the variational method. Nerve fiber excitation was described by the model of McNeal. ⋯ Selective stimulation of a fascicle was theoretically analyzed for several electrode positions: outside the nerve, in the connective tissue of the nerve, and inside a fascicle. The model results predict that the use of intraneural or even intrafascicular electrodes is necessary for selective stimulation of fascicles not lying at the surface of the nerve. Model predictions corresponded with experimental results of Veltink et al. on intrafascicular and extraneural stimulation of rat common peroneal nerve and to results of McNeal and Bowman on muscle selective stimulation in multifascicular dog sciatic nerve using an extraneural multielectrode configuration.