Mimche Sylive, Ahn Dukju, Kiani Mehdi, Elahi Hassan, Murray Kyle, Easley Kirk, Sokoloff Alan, Ghovanloo Maysam
Department of Physiology, Emory University School of Medicine, 615 Michael St., Atlanta, GA 30322, United States.
School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 85 Fifth Street NW, Atlanta, GA 30308, United States.
Arch Oral Biol. 2016 Nov;71:1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.archoralbio.2016.06.019. Epub 2016 Jun 18.
The Tongue Drive System (TDS) is a new wearable assistive technology (AT), developed to translate voluntary tongue movements to user-defined computer commands by tracking the position of a titanium-encased magnetic tracer (Ti-Mag) implanted into the tongue. TDS application, however, is constrained by limited information on biological consequence and safety of device implantation into the tongue body. Here we implant a stainless-steel pellet in the rat tongue and assay pellet migration, tongue lick function, and tongue histology to test the safety and biocompatibility of unanchored tongue implants.
Water consumption, weight and lick behavior were measured before and for >24days after implantation of a stainless-steel spherical pellet (0.5mm) into the anterior tongue body of twelve adult male rats. X-rays were obtained weekly to assess pellet migration. Pellet location and tissue reaction to implantation were determined by post-mortem dissection and histology of the anterior tongue.
By dissection pellets were distributed across the transverse plane of the tongue. Measures of water consumption, weight, and lick behavior were unchanged by implantation except for a decrease in consumption immediately post-implantation in some animals. By X-ray, there was no migration of the implant, a finding supported by pellet encapsulation demonstrated histologically. Measures of lick behavior were minimally impacted by implantation.
A smooth spherical stainless-steel implant in the anterior tongue of the rat does not migrate, is encapsulated and does not substantially impact lick behavior. These findings support the implantation of small tracers in the anterior tongue in humans for operating wearable assistive technologies.
舌驱动系统(TDS)是一种新型可穿戴辅助技术(AT),其通过追踪植入舌内的钛包裹磁示踪剂(Ti-Mag)的位置,将自主舌运动转化为用户定义的计算机指令。然而,TDS的应用受到舌体植入设备的生物学后果和安全性方面信息有限的限制。在此,我们将不锈钢小球植入大鼠舌内,检测小球迁移、舌舔功能和舌组织学,以测试非固定舌植入物的安全性和生物相容性。
在12只成年雄性大鼠的舌前部植入一个不锈钢球形小球(0.5毫米),在植入前及植入后超过24天测量水消耗量、体重和舔舐行为。每周进行X射线检查以评估小球迁移情况。通过对舌前部进行尸检解剖和组织学检查确定小球位置及植入后的组织反应。
通过解剖发现小球分布在舌的横断面上。除了一些动物在植入后立即出现水消耗量下降外,植入对水消耗量、体重和舔舐行为的测量结果没有影响。通过X射线检查,植入物没有迁移,组织学检查显示小球被包裹这一结果支持了这一发现。植入对舔舐行为的测量影响极小。
大鼠舌前部的光滑球形不锈钢植入物不会迁移,会被包裹,并且不会对舔舐行为产生实质性影响。这些发现支持在人类舌前部植入小型示踪剂以操作可穿戴辅助技术。