Abstract

A combination of near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) and electrocorticography (ECoG) provides beneficial information on cortical activity from different aspects. Integration of such multimodal measurement capability into a single apparatus and the direct measurement of cortical activity during chronic subdural implantation may be a powerful means for clinical diagnosis and neuroscience. However, an optical fiber-based NIRS probe cannot be miniaturized for implantation into the brain, and the light-scattering effect of ECoG electrodes in NIRS measurements is unknown. We describe here the development of a flexible probe, small enough for chronic subdural implantation, for simultaneous NIRS and ECoG. Two light-emitting diodes of different wavelengths and two photodiodes were mounted on a polyimide-based flexible substrate, and ECoG electrodes were formed with a design minimizing artifacts in NIRS recording. The fabricated probe measured ECoGs at sufficient spatial resolution and submicromolar changes in hemoglobin concentrations in in vivo experiments with acute implantation into a rat. Comparison of measured changes in hemoglobin concentrations for different source-detector distances reveals the reliability of the measured values and the practicality of the simulation model. The proposed intracranial multimodality probe may provide beneficial evidence for pre- and intrasurgical assessment of neurosurgery and reveal the interaction of electrophysiology and hemodynamics at high spatial resolution without artifacts due to scalp blood flow.

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