Development of the Osseointegrated Neural Interface for prosthetic control into a pre-clinical translational sheep model.

NIH RePORTER · VA · I01 · · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Clinical significance: Major amputation of a limb has a significant impact on an individual's quality of life, as well as directly affecting family members and the greater community. Veterans represent a unique population that are more greatly affected by amputation than the civilian population. The etiology of amputation in veterans is twofold. At one end of the spectrum there are the inevitable traumatic injuries of modern combat, particularly blast wounds from improvised explosives. These injuries predominantly affect young warriors, both male and female, under 30 years of age, who are increasingly experiencing major traumatic amputations of more than one limb at a time. At the other end of the spectrum, the aging veteran population is increasingly undergoing lower limb amputation secondary to peripheral arterial disease. Regardless of cause, most veterans live for many years after amputation, and bear the significant disabilities associated with losing one or more limbs. As such, there is an increasing demand for both the Department of Defense (DOD) and Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to provide long-term financial and medical support to veteran amputees. Veteran and civilian amputees share the same physical and social determinants to quality of life, such as ability to participate in activity and pain management. The new age of robotic prostheses holds great promise for alleviating many if not all restrictions to physical activity and participation in greater society. However, the ability to seamlessly control a prosthesis as if the device were the original limb remains a futuristic goal. To specifically address the urgent need for better prosthesis control, we have devised the novel Osseointegrated Neural Interface (ONI) for prosthesis control on several fronts simultaneously. The ONI combines modern surgical procedures with state-of-the-art neural interfacing technology and osseointegration to form a single, compact unit, inside the medullary canal of the amputated limb. We have previously demonstrated in rabbits that an ONI is capable of bi-directional neural signaling, including motor signal output and sensory input that would serve for prosthesis control. Consequently, the objective of this grant is to translate our rabbit ONI model for prosthetic control into a preclinical large animal ovine (sheep) model, and implement a closed loop, osseointegrated, neural prosthetic with sensory feedback to be studied in a rehabilitation setting for future clinical translation. Our long-term goal is the clinical application of our novel ONI for prosthetic control to serve the veteran amputee community. Proposed Methods: A below knee amputation will be performed in a total of 10 skeletally mature sheep. An ONI will be created at the time of amputation by translocating the tibial, sural, and common peroneal nerves into the medullary canal of the amputated tibia via a corticotomy. The terminal ends of the nerves will be interfaced with cuff electro...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10049197
Project number
5I01RX003129-02
Recipient
WM S. MIDDLETON MEMORIAL VETERANS HOSP
Principal Investigator
Samuel Poore
Activity code
I01
Funding institute
VA
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
Award type
5
Project period
2019-11-01 → 2023-10-31