Abstract

BackgroundThis paper describes a method to reversibly block nerve conduction through direct application of a 1 Hz sinusoidal current waveform delivered through a bipolar nerve cuff electrode. This low frequency alternating current (LFAC) waveform was previously shown to reversibly block the effects of vagal pulse stimulation evoked bradycardia in-vivo in the anaesthetised rat model (Mintch et al. 2019). The present work measured the effectiveness of LFAC block on larger caliber myelinated vagal afferent fibers in human sized nerve bundles projecting to changes in breathing rate mediated by the Hering-Breuer (HB) reflex in anaesthetized domestic swine (n=5).MethodsTwo bipolar cuff electrodes were implanted unilaterally to the left cervical vagus nerve, which was crushed caudal to the electrodes to eliminate cardiac effects. A tripolar recording cuff electrode was placed rostral to the bipolar stimulating electrodes on the same nerve to measure changes in the compound nerve action potentials (CNAP) elicited by the vagal pulse stimulation and conditioned by the LFAC waveform. Standard pulse stimulation was applied at a sufficient level to induce a reduction in breathing rate through the HB reflex. If unblocked, the HB reflex would cause breathing to slow down and potentially halt completely. Block was quantified by the ability of LFAC to reduce the effect of the HB reflex by monitoring the respiration rate during LFAC alone, LFAC and vagal stimulation, and vagal stimulation alone.ResultsLFAC achieved 87.2 ±8.8% block (n=5) at current levels of 1.1 ±0.3 mAp (current to peak), which was well within the water window of the working electrode. CNAP showed changes that directly correlated to the effectiveness of LFAC block, which manifested itself as the slowing and amplitude reduction of components of the CNAP.ConclusionThese novel findings suggest that LFAC is a potential alternative or complementary method to other electrical blocking techniques in clinical applications.

Highlights

  • This paper describes a method to reversibly block nerve conduction through direct application of a 1 Hz sinusoidal current waveform delivered through a bipolar nerve cuff electrode

  • There is a clear increase in the inter breath interval at ∼140 s showing the reduced breathing rate induced by VNS mediated HB reflex

  • The aim of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility of the low frequency alternating current (LFAC) waveform to induce nerve conduction block in large nerve bundles

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Summary

Introduction

This paper describes a method to reversibly block nerve conduction through direct application of a 1 Hz sinusoidal current waveform delivered through a bipolar nerve cuff electrode This low frequency alternating current (LFAC) waveform was previously shown to reversibly block the effects of vagal pulse stimulation evoked bradycardia in-vivo in the anaesthetised rat model (Mintch et al 2019). KHFACb is a method that uses a sinusoidal waveform with frequencies ranging from 1 kHz - 40 kHz (Kilgore and Bhadra 2014; Kilgore and Bhadra 2004) It has an associated onset response which causes the activation of nerve fibers before block can occur (Foldes et al 2009), implicating an open state Na+ channel inactivation mechanism. A combination of DC block followed by kHFACb is a strategy used in which the DC waveform blocks the onset activation of kHFACb (Franke et al 2014; Miles et al 2007; Ackermann et al 2011; Vrabec 2016)

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