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Not sure where Parkinson's fit in here...

Nic Marais

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Article on Popular Mechanics website.


http://www.popularmechanics.co.za/content/news/singlepage.asp?key=637



Coating improves electrical stimulation therapy used for Parkinson's,
depression, chronic pain


Researchers at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Centre (UT
Southwestern) have designed a way to improve electrical stimulation of
nerves by outfitting electrodes with the latest in chemically
engineered fashion: a coating of basic black, formed from carbon
nanotubes.

 The nanotube sheathing improves the signals received and transmitted
by electrodes, which researchers say is a potentially critical step
for advancing electrical nerve stimulation therapy. This type of
therapy increasingly shows promise for diseases ranging from epilepsy
to depression to chronic leg and back pain.

By implanting electronic nerve stimulators, doctors elsewhere have
provided a quadriplegic patient with the ability to move a computer
cursor at will, and monkeys have been able to move objects in a
virtual world with mere mind power. For individuals who lose an arm or
leg and rely on prosthetics, implanted stimulators offer promise in
restoring feelings of sensation.

"The key to success for these types of brain-machine interfaces is
where the electrode meets the nerve tissue," said Dr Edward Keefer,
instructor of plastic surgery at UT Southwestern and lead author of
the study appearing in a recent issue of Nature Nanotechnology. "When
we coat the electrodes with carbon nanotubes, it improves the
stimulation of the nerve and the feedback from the sensors."

Depending on the way the nanotubes are fashioned, researchers were
able to bolster either the stimulation or receptive capabilities to
improve performance. In some tests, the nanotube coating improved
performance by forty-fold, while in others it improved by a factor of
as much as 1,600.

Nanotubes look like lattices rolled into a tube on a microscopic
scale. Although they are 1/50,000 the width of a human hair, nanotubes
are nonetheless among the stiffest and strongest fibres known, as well
as excellent conductors of electricity.

Those properties proved to be just the attributes needed to help
electrophysiologists conquer some of the hurdles facing them – issues
such as battery power and chemical stability.

The carbon nanotube coating improves conductivity, which means less
energy is needed to power the nerve stimulator. That can help reduce
routine maintenance, such as the need to change batteries in implanted
stimulation devices, as well as reduce tissue damage caused by the
electrical charge.

"Our process is like taking a Ford Pinto, pouring on this chemical
coating, and turning it into a Ferrari," Dr Keefer said.

Researchers have tried several types of electrochemical coatings to
see if they could improve conductivity, but the coatings often break
down quickly or fail to stay affixed to the electrodes. The carbon
nanotube coating shows far more promise, although further research is
still needed, Dr Keefer said.

"The development of new technologies by Dr Keefer to potentially
restore function in wounded tissues and future transplantations is
exciting," said Dr Spencer Brown, assistant professor of plastic
surgery who heads research in the Nancy Lee and Perry R Bass Advanced
Plastic Surgery and Wound Healing Laboratory at UT Southwestern.

To find out more, visit University of Texas Southwestern Medical Centre

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