Selective distant electrostimulation by synchronized bipolar nanosecond pulses

Abstract

A unique aspect of electrostimulation (ES) with nanosecond electric pulses (nsEP) is the inhibition of effects when the polarity is reversed. This bipolar cancellation feature makes bipolar nsEP less efficient at biostimulation than unipolar nsEP. We propose to minimize stimulation near pulse-delivering electrodes by applying bipolar nsEP, whereas the superposition of two phase-shifted bipolar nsEP from two independent sources yields a biologically-effective unipolar pulse remotely. This is accomplished by electrical compensation of all nsEP phases except the first one, resulting in the restoration of stimulation efficiency due to cancellation of bipolar cancellation (CANCAN-ES). We experimentally proved the CANCAN-ES paradigm by measuring YO-PRO-1 dye uptake in CHO-K1 cells which were permeabilized by multiphasic nsEP (600 ns per phase) from two generators; these nsEP were synchronized either to overlap into a unipolar pulse remotely from electrodes (CANCAN), or not to overlap (control). Enhancement of YO-PRO-1 entry due to CANCAN was observed in all sets of experiments and reached ~3-fold in the center of the gap between electrodes, exactly where the unipolar pulse was formed, and equaled the degree of bipolar cancellation. CANCAN-ES is promising for non-invasive deep tissue stimulation, either alone or combined with other remote stimulation techniques to improve targeting.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Sep 11, 2019
Source ID
10.1038/s41598-019-49664-2

Entities

People

  • Andrei G Pakhomov
  • Carol Zhou
  • Elena C. Gianulis
  • Enbo Yang
  • Maura Casciola
  • Shu Xiao

Organizations

  • Air Force Office of Scientific Research

Tags

Readers

  • Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery.
  • Oncology (Cancer Research).
  • Semiconductor Device Technology