Abstract

Medical treatment is increasingly benefiting from biomedical microsystems, especially the trending telemedical application. A promising modality for tumor therapy showed the application of nanosecond pulsed electric fields (nsPEF) on cells to achieve nanoporation, cell death, and other cell reactions. A key technology for this method is the generation of pulsed fields in the nanosecond range with high-field strengths in the range of several kilovolts per centimeter. For further biomedical applications, state-of-the-art setups need to decrease in size and improve their capability of integration into microsystems. Due to demanding electronic requirements, i.e., using high voltages and fast pulses, miniaturization and low-cost fabrication of the electrode is first considered. This paper proposes a proof-of-concept for a miniaturized printed flexible electrode that can apply nsPEF on adherent fibroblast cells. The interdigital gold electrode was printed on polyimide with line-width of about 10 µm using an electrohydrodynamic inkjet printer. Furthermore, an electrical circuit was developed to generate both electrical pulses in the nano-second range and voltages up to 180 V. The electrode was integrated into an experimental setup for in-vitro application to human fibroblasts. Field strengths up to 100 kV/cm with 45 ns pulse duration were applied, depending on the degree of cell confluence. The cells show contraction, detachment from the electrode, and lethal reactions after the nsPEF treatment. Furthermore, this printed miniaturized electrode was found to be suitable for subsequent microsystem integration and further cell experiments to optimize pulse parameters for control of cell reaction and behavior.

Highlights

  • Medical cancer treatment depends on the type of cancer; various methods are continuously under investigation

  • The electrodes were printed on top substrate with gold nanoparticle ink (Au-Nanometal, ULVAC Ink., Methuen, MA, USA) using an of the polyimide substrate with gold nanoparticle ink (Au-Nanometal, ULVAC Ink., Methuen, MA, electrohydrodynamic inkjet (E-jet) printer (S050, Super Inkjet Technology Inc., Tsukuba, Japan) with nozzle size SFN

  • A solution of cell medium and 0.5% trypan blue was added to the cells and removed 5 min after

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Medical cancer treatment depends on the type of cancer; various methods are continuously under investigation. In addition to the common chemo- and hormonotherapy, radiation therapy and surgical resection [1], other physical methods such as radiofrequency ablation, laserand microwave-thermal therapy and electrochemotherapy (ECT) have shown full or partial curative treatment in studies [2,3]. The stated therapies are often associated with additional damage to other cells, apart from targeting the tumor itself. ECT is one therapy among the mentioned, which potentially enables a more targeted treatment of only affected cancer cells. It exploits benefits from physical and chemical therapy by enhancing the local application of drugs on tumor cells through electropulsation, if aided with miniaturized and locally applicable electrodes [3,4].

Objectives
Methods
Results

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

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.