RR&D Research Career Scientist Award Application

NIH RePORTER · VA · IK6 · · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Overall goals: My laboratory is dedicated to understanding and mitigating the neuroinflammatory response to implanted devices within the central nervous system. Such devices range from ventricular shunts to various types of stimulating and recording electrodes. Neural devices range in material type, size, architecture, function, and placement. Regardless of any of these variables, the neuroinflammatory response to the implant plays a significant role on the integrity of the healthy tissue and the longevity of device performance. A progressive decline in recordings quality after implantation has been known for over 40 years. Unfortunately, recording instability is still a commonly documented problem. A major portion of my work has focused on studying various aspects of intracortical microelectrode performance, and pursuing both materials-based and therapeutic-based methods to mitigate the inflammatory-mediated intracortical microelectrode failure mechanisms. Areas include: 1) Role of tissue/device mechanical mismatch on microelectrode failure. I have developed biologically- inspired, mechanically-dynamic intracortical microelectrodes based on their polymer nanocomposite material. Enabled by the novel material system, I am able to independently examine and manipulate device modulus, geometry, and drug-eluting capabilities. Over the past ten years, my team has successfully demonstrated that mechanically-dynamic polymer-based intracortical microelectrodes are stiff enough to be inserted into the brain, become compliant to reduce micro-motion and inhibit late-stage neuroinflammatory responses, and can be fabricated into functional intracortical microelectrodes capable of recording from neural structures in live animals. We have also recently demonstrated that mechanically-dynamic polymer-based intracortical microelectrodes can be utilized to deliver anti-inflammatory therapeutics to further mitigate implant-associated inflammation. As part of our ongoing Department of Defense CDMRP award, we are collaboratively working to characterize the relationship between microelectrode-induced tissue strain and recording performance. 2) Role of oxidative stress on microelectrode failure. Oxidative pathways have been implicated in both neurodegeneration and corrosive damage to both the metallic and insulating materials of current intracortical microelectrode technologies. Thus, approaches to mitigate or attenuate the deleterious effects of oxidative inflammatory products are of significant importance. We have demonstrated that several antioxidants can be delivered systemically or locally to temporally mitigate neuronal damage and loss, and that bioactive coatings with mimetic anti-oxidative enzymes can prolong neuroprotection. Further, unpublished results have also established a correlation between osmotically delivered antioxidant therapy within the brain and improved intracortical microelectrode recording performance. Over the next four years, my new VA Merit Re...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10060750
Project number
5IK6RX003077-03
Recipient
LOUIS STOKES CLEVELAND VA MEDICAL CENTER
Principal Investigator
Jeffrey R Capadona
Activity code
IK6
Funding institute
VA
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
Award type
5
Project period
2019-01-01 → 2023-12-31