Abstract

Gastric contractions are, in part, coordinated by slow-waves. Functional motility disorders are correlated with abnormal slow-wave patterns. Gastric pacing has been attempted in a limited number of studies to correct gastric dysmotility. Integrated electrode arrays capable of pacing and recording slow-wave responses are required. New flexible surface-contact pacing electrodes (SPE) that can be placed atraumatically to pace and simultaneously map the slow-wave activity in the surrounding area were developed. SPE were applied in pigs in-vivo for gastric pacing along with concurrent high-resolution slow wave mapping as validation. Histology was conducted to assess for tissue damage around the pacing site. SPE were compared against temporary cardiac pacing electrodes (CPE), and hook-shaped pacing electrodes (HPE), for entrainment rate, entrainment threshold, contact quality, and slow-wave propagation patterns. Pacing with SPE (amplitude: 2 mA, pulse width: 100 ms) consistently achieved pacemaker initiation. Histological analysis illustrated no significant tissue damage. SPE resulted in a higher rate of entrainment (64%) than CPE (37%) and HPE (24%), with lower entrainment threshold (25% of CPE and 16% of HPE). High resolution mapping showed that there was no significant difference between the initiated slow-wave propagation speed for SPE and CPE (6.8±0.1 vs 6.8±0.2mm/s, P>0.05). However, SPE had higher loss of tissue lead contact quality than CPE (42±16 vs 13±10% over 20min). Pacing with SPE induced a slow-wave pacemaker site without tissue damage. SPE offered an atraumatic pacing electrode with a significant reduction of power consumption and placement time compared to impaled electrodes.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call