Implantable light delivery interfaces for optical neural stimulation

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Publication Type dissertation
School or College College of Engineering
Department Electrical & Computer Engineering
Author Abaya, Tanya Vanessa F.
Title Implantable light delivery interfaces for optical neural stimulation
Date 2013-12
Description Optical methods are well-established in the fields of neuroscience, medical imaging, and diagnostics, etc. Optogenetics, for example, enables molecular specificity in optical neural stimulation and recording and has been named the "Method of the Year 2010" by Nature Methods. A novel microdevice was designed, fabricated, developed, and tested to facilitate three-dimensional (3D) deep-tissue light penetration with the capacity to accommodate spatiotemporal modulation of one or more wavelengths to advance a broad range of applications for optical neural interfaces. A 3D optrode array consisting of optically transparent "needles" can penetrate >1 mm directly into tissue, thereby creating multiple independent paths for light propagation that avoid attenuation due to tissue absorption and scattering, providing a high level of selectivity and comprehensive access to tissue not available in current interfaces. Arrays were developed based upon silicon and glass. The silicon optrode array is based upon the well-established Utah electrode array architectures and is suitable for near-infrared (NIR) applications; glass optrodes are appropriate waveguides for both visible and NIR wavelengths. Arrays were bulk-micromachined with high-aspect ratio, a process that has not been reported to be applied to glass previously. In addition to device fabrication, extensive laboratory testing was performed with various optical sources to determine loss mechanisms and emitted beam profiles in tissue across the relevant wavelength ranges, with particular focus on performance metrics for optogenetic and infrared neural stimulation applications. Optrode arrays were determined to be amenable to integration with typical neural stimulation and imaging light delivery mechanisms such as optical fibers and microscopes. Glass optrodes were able to transmit light at ~90% efficiency through depths many times greater than the tissue attenuation length, with negligible light in-coupling loss. Si optrodes were determined to be only ~40% efficient with losses mostly from high index contrast, tip backreflection, and taper radiation. The in-coupling technique and optrode geometry may be modified to produce illumination volumes appropriate for various experimental paradigms. While the focus of this work is on optical neural stimulation, optrode array devices have application in basic neuroscience research, highly selective photodynamic therapy, and deep tissue imaging for diagnostics and therapy.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Infrared neural stimulation; Neural array; Optical stimulation; Optogenetics; Optrodes; Waveguides
Dissertation Institution University of Utah
Dissertation Name Doctor of Philosophy
Language eng
Rights Management Copyright © Tanya Vanessa F. Abaya 2013
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 2,827,523 Bytes
Identifier etd3/id/3483
ARK ark:/87278/s6cp0c7h
Setname ir_etd
ID 197037
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6cp0c7h
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