Minimally-invasive brain probe senses a single neuron

Stanford Science neuron probe

At Stanford University, researchers have found a way to record the activity of a single neuron without burrowing into the brain – of a rat in this case.

Developed by Anqi Zhang and colleagues, the key part is a micro-probe that can be threaded through blood vessels as small as 100μm in diameter.


Initially it is housed in a micro-catheter that takes it to where it is needed, after which the mesh-like electrode is pushed out by saline flow though the outer tube.


Local field potentials and single-unit spikes are said by the team to have been selectively achieved in the cortex and olfactory bulb, and both minimal immune response and long-term stability have been reported.

The work is published in Science as ‘Ultraflexible endovascular probes for brain recording through micrometer-scale vasculature‘ – payment required for full access.

Image credit: Anqi Zhang, Stanford University


Comments

One comment

  1. SecretEuroPatentAgentMan

    As is the case for most scientific publications, a preprint is available. These preprints differ only in minor ways from the final publications, and are made legally available on preprint servers. In this case you can find it here:
    https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.03.20.533576v1
    The preprint server also notes a patent application is already filed.

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