The auditory midbrain implant (AMI), which consists of a single shank array designed for stimulation within the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC), has been developed for deaf patients who cannot benefit from a cochlear implant. Currently, performance levels in clinical trials for the AMI are far from those achieved by the cochlear implant and vary dramatically across patients, in part due to stimulation location effects. As an initial step towards improving the AMI, we investigated how stimulation of different regions along the isofrequency domain of the ICC as well as varying pulse phase durations and levels affected auditory cortical activity in anesthetized guinea pigs. This study was motivated by the need to determine in which region to implant the single shank array within a threedimensional ICC structure and what stimulus parameters to use in patients. Our findings indicate that complex and unfavorable cortical activation properties are elicited by stimulation of caudal-dorsal ICC regions with the AMI array. Our results also confirm the existence of different functional regions along the isofrequency domain of the ICC (i.e., a caudaldorsal and a rostral-ventral region), which has been traditionally unclassified. Based on our study as well as previous animal and human AMI findings, we may need to deliver more complex stimuli than currently used in the AMI patients to effectively activate the caudal ICC or ensure that the single shank AMI is only implanted into a rostral-ventral ICC region in future patients.
The phenomenal success of the cochlear implant (CI) is attributed to its ability to provide sufficient temporal and spectral cues for speech understanding. Unfortunately, the CI is ineffective for those without a functional auditory nerve or an implantable cochlea required for CI implementation. As an alternative, our group developed and implanted in deaf patients a new auditory midbrain implant (AMI) to stimulate the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC). Although the AMI can provide frequency cues, it appears to insufficiently transmit temporal cues for speech understanding. The three-dimensional ICC consists of two-dimensional isofrequency laminae. The single-shank AMI only stimulates one site in any given ICC lamina and does not exhibit enhanced activity (i.e., louder percepts or lower thresholds) for repeated pulses on the same site with intervals <2-5 ms, as occurs for CI pulse or acoustic click stimulation. This enhanced activation, related to short-term temporal integration, is important for tracking the rapid temporal fluctuations of a speech signal. Therefore, we investigated the effects of coactivation of different regions within an ICC lamina on primary auditory cortex activity in ketamine-anesthetized guinea pigs. Interestingly, our findings reveal an enhancement mechanism for integrating converging inputs from an ICC lamina on a fast scale (<6-ms window) that is compromised when stimulating just a single ICC location. Coactivation of two ICC regions also reduces the strong and long-term (>100 ms) suppressive effects induced by repeated stimulation of just a single location. Improving AMI performance may require at least two shanks implanted along the tonotopic gradient of the ICC that enables coactivation of multiple regions along an ICC lamina with the appropriate interstimulus delays.
Ongoing clinical studies on patients recently implanted with the auditory midbrain implant (AMI) into the inferior colliculus (IC) for hearing restoration have shown that these patients do not achieve performance levels comparable to cochlear implant patients. The AMI consists of a single-shank array (20 electrodes) for stimulation along the tonotopic axis of the IC. Recent findings suggest that one major limitation in AMI performance is the inability to sufficiently activate neurons across the three-dimensional (3-D) IC. Unfortunately, there are no currently available 3-D array technologies that can be used for clinical applications. More recently, there has been a new initiative by the European Commission to fund and develop 3-D chronic electrode arrays for science and clinical applications through the NeuroProbes project that can overcome the bulkiness and limited 3-D configurations of currently available array technologies. As part of the NeuroProbes initiative, we investigated whether their new array technology could be potentially used for future AMI patients. Since the NeuroProbes technology had not yet been tested for electrical stimulation in an in vivo animal preparation, we performed experiments in ketamine-anesthetized guinea pigs in which we inserted and stimulated a NeuroProbes array within the IC and recorded the corresponding neural activation within the auditory cortex. We used 2-D arrays for this initial feasibility study since they were already available and were sufficient to access the IC and also demonstrate effective activation of the central auditory system. Based on these encouraging results and the ability to develop customized 3-D arrays with the NeuroProbes technology, we can further investigate different stimulation patterns across the ICC to improve AMI performance.
Joining materials with different properties into a single component is an attractive solution that allows producing parts with unique properties. In this respect, Two-Component Metal Injection Moulding (2C-MIM) presents numerous advantages, since the moulding and joining stage are performed in a single process step. In this work, the challenges, which occur when different materials are combined, are elucidated. Furthermore, the contact between metals with unequal chemical compositions leads to atomic interdiffusion that forms an interface layer. The interface quality is crucial to the production of intact parts after processing. Different material combinations are co-sintered and the interfaces are characterized by means of optical microscopy and EDX/SEM line scans. Further, thermodynamic and kinetic simulations are used to examine the interdiffusion in detail. The results show promising possibilities to combine different materials and helpful methods to examine the interface.
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