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Epidermal electronics for noninvasive, wireless, quantitative assessment of ventricular shunt function in patients with hydrocephalus

Authors :
Zachary A. Abecassis
Kun Hyuck Lee
Yinji Ma
Siddharth Krishnan
Barry Ng
John A. Rogers
Chen Wei
Yonggang Huang
Camille Goudeseune
Natalie Kim
Philipp Gutruf
Juliet Freudman
Matthew C. Tate
Matthew B. Potts
Izabela Stankiewicz
Jong Yoon Lee
Tyler R. Ray
Nikhil K. Murthy
Amit Ayer
John Ciraldo
Grace Young
Xue Feng
Julia Stillman
Source :
Science translational medicine. 10(465)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Hydrocephalus is a common and costly neurological condition caused by the overproduction and/or impaired resorption of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The current standard of care, ventricular catheters (shunts), is prone to failure, which can result in nonspecific symptoms such as headaches, dizziness, and nausea. Current diagnostic tools for shunt failure such as computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), radionuclide shunt patency studies (RSPSs), and ice pack–mediated thermodilution have disadvantages including high cost, poor accuracy, inconvenience, and safety concerns. Here, we developed and tested a noninvasive, skin-mounted, wearable measurement platform that incorporates arrays of thermal sensors and actuators for precise, continuous, or intermittent measurements of flow through subdermal shunts, without the drawbacks of other methods. Systematic theoretical and experimental benchtop studies demonstrate high performance across a range of practical operating conditions. Advanced electronics designs serve as the basis of a wireless embodiment for continuous monitoring based on rechargeable batteries and data transmission using Bluetooth protocols. Clinical studies involving five patients validate the sensor’s ability to detect the presence of CSF flow ( P = 0.012) and further distinguish between baseline flow, diminished flow, and distal shunt failure. Last, we demonstrate processing algorithms to translate measured data into quantitative flow rate. The sensor designs, fabrication schemes, wireless architectures, and patient trials reported here represent an advance in hydrocephalus diagnostics with ability to visualize flow in a simple, user-friendly mode, accessible to the physician and patient alike.

Details

ISSN :
19466242
Volume :
10
Issue :
465
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science translational medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4f1b13dc0ea968ede915b7261eafadc9