This application is a national stage of Application No. PCT/AU2012/000518 filed May 11, 2012, which claims the benefit of Australian Provisional Patent Application No. 2011901824 filed May 13, 2011, Australian Provisional Patent Application No. 2011901817 filed May 13, 2011, and Australian Provisional Patent Application No. 2011901822 filed May 13, 2011, each of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to measurement of a neural response to a stimulus, and in particular relates to measurement of a compound action potential by using one or more electrodes implanted proximal to the neural pathway.
There are a range of situations in which it is desirable to apply neural stimuli in order to give rise to a compound action potential (CAP). For example, neuromodulation is used to treat a variety of disorders including chronic pain, Parkinson's disease, and migraine. A neuromodulation system applies an electrical pulse to tissue in order to generate a therapeutic effect. When used to relieve chronic pain, the electrical pulse is applied to the dorsal column (DC) of the spinal cord. Such a system typically comprises an implanted electrical pulse generator, and a power source such as a battery that may be rechargeable by transcutaneous inductive transfer. An electrode array is connected to the pulse generator, and is positioned in the dorsal epidural space above the dorsal column. An electrical pulse applied to the dorsal column by an electrode causes the depolarisation of neurons, and generation of propagating action potentials. The fibres being stimulated in this way inhibit the transmission of pain from that segment in the spinal cord to the brain. To sustain the pain relief effects, stimuli are applied substantially continuously, for example at 100 Hz.
While the clinical effect of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is well established, the precise mechanisms involved are poorly understood. The DC is the target of the electrical stimulation, as it contains the afferent Aβ fibres of interest. Aβ fibres mediate sensations of touch, vibration and pressure from the skin, and are thickly myelinated mechanoreceptors that respond to non-noxious stimuli. The prevailing view is that SCS stimulates only a small number of Aβ fibres in the DC. The pain relief mechanisms of SCS are thought to include evoked antidromic activity of Aβ fibres having an inhibitory effect, and evoked orthodromic activity of Aβ fibres playing a role in pain suppression. It is also thought that SCS recruits Aβ nerve fibres primarily in the DC, with antidromic propagation of the evoked response from the DC into the dorsal horn thought to synapse to wide dynamic range neurons in an inhibitory manner.
Neuromodulation may also be used to stimulate efferent fibres, for example to induce motor functions. In general, the electrical stimulus generated in a neuromodulation system triggers a neural action potential which then has either an inhibitory or excitatory effect. Inhibitory effects can be used to modulate an undesired process such as the transmission of pain, or to cause a desired effect such as the contraction of a muscle.
The action potentials generated among a large number of fibres sum to form a compound action potential (CAP). The CAP is the sum of responses from a large number of single fibre action potentials. The CAP recorded is the result of a large number of different fibres depolarising. The propagation velocity is determined largely by the fibre diameter, to which velocity is roughly proportional, and for large myelinated fibres found in the dorsal root entry zone (DREZ) and nearby dorsal column the velocity can be over 60 ms−1. The CAP generated from the firing of a group of similar fibres is measured as a positive peak potential P1, then a negative peak N1, followed by a second positive peak P2. This is caused by the region of activation passing the recording electrode as the action potentials propagate along the individual fibres. An observed CAP signal will typically have a maximum amplitude in the range of microvolts, whereas a stimulus applied to evoke the CAP is typically several volts.
For effective and comfortable operation, it is necessary to maintain stimuli amplitude or delivered charge above a recruitment threshold, below which a stimulus will fail to recruit any neural response. It is also necessary to apply stimuli which are below a comfort threshold, above which uncomfortable or painful percepts arise due to increasing recruitment of Aδ fibres which are thinly myelinated sensory nerve fibres associated with acute pain, cold and pressure sensation. In almost all neuromodulation applications, a single class of fibre response is desired, but the stimulus waveforms employed can recruit other classes of fibres which cause unwanted side effects, such as muscle contraction if motor fibres are recruited. The task of maintaining appropriate neural recruitment is made more difficult by electrode migration and/or postural changes of the implant recipient, either of which can significantly alter the neural recruitment arising from a given stimulus, depending on whether the stimulus is applied before or after the change in electrode position or user posture. Postural changes alone can cause a comfortable and effective stimulus regime to become either ineffectual or painful.
Any discussion of documents, acts, materials, devices, articles or the like which has been included in the present specification is solely for the purpose of providing a context for the present invention. It is not to be taken as an admission that any or all of these matters form part of the prior art base or were common general knowledge in the field relevant to the present invention as it existed before the priority date of each claim of this application.
Throughout this specification the word “comprise”, or variations such as “comprises” or “comprising”, will be understood to imply the inclusion of a stated element, integer or step, or group of elements, integers or steps, but not the exclusion of any other element, integer or step, or group of elements, integers or steps.
According to a first aspect the present invention provides a method of measuring a neural response evoked by a stimulus, the method comprising:
According to a second aspect the present invention provides a device for measuring a neural response evoked by a stimulus, the device comprising:
Some embodiments of the invention may provide for comparing the first recording and the second recording in order to gain information regarding a selected neural fibre class. In such embodiments, where the first and second electrode are a distance d apart and the selected neural fibre class has a conduction velocity of c, the first recording may be delayed by a time period t=d/c before the comparing. Alternatively a time delay tn for each nth sense electrode may be individually estimated. For example the delays tn may be estimated in advance by obtaining measurements of a response evoked by a high amplitude stimuli, and/or by averaging tn estimates over multiple stimulus cycles, to provide improved signal to noise ratio in the estimates of tn. The comparing may comprise summing together the first recording, delayed by t or tn as appropriate, and the second recording. Alternatively the comparing may comprise cross-correlating or convolving the delayed first recording with the second recording.
In some embodiments of the invention, more than two recordings may be obtained from respective electrodes spaced apart along the neural pathway, for example to further improve signal quality of the summation or convolution. Suitable delays applicable to the respective recordings can be determined from the electrode positions and conduction velocity of interest.
In further embodiments, the comparison may be performed for variable delays ti, to yield a “propagram” reflecting the comparison outcome with respect to ti. Should multiple fibre classes be recruited and making a contribution to the evoked neural response, such a propagram can be expected to have peaks at ti=d/ci, where the ci are the propagation velocity of each respective fibre class. The present invention thus permits the amplitude of each such peak in the propagram to be used as feedback to control a stimulus to provide desired selectivity of recruitment of each fibre class. Moreover, in such embodiments, the position of each peak ti in the propagram allows a measurement of the propagation velocity of each fibre class to be obtained, as ci=d/ti. The conduction velocity may be thus measured over time in order to diagnose a disease which affects the conduction velocity. Additionally or alternatively the position of a peak in the propagram may be used to obtain an estimate for the conduction velocity in order to estimate the delays tn. The propagram may be produced in response to a high intensity stimulus, and or an average of measurements of responses evoked by multiple stimuli, in order to improve signal to noise ratio and improve the estimate of peak position in the propagram.
Additionally or alternatively, in some embodiments of the invention the plurality of recordings of the evoked neural response may be compared and combined in order to yield a single combined measurement having improved signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), which will tend to cancel decorrelated amplifier noise at each respective sense electrode. To compensate for neural response signal attenuation along the neural pathway, corresponding gain values may be applied to each of the plurality of measurements prior to combining. Moreover to compensate for dispersion of the neural signal along the neural pathway, corresponding phase terms may be applied to each of the plurality of measurements prior to the combining. Indeed, in general a filter matched to the expected response may be applied to each measurement obtained at each respective sense electrode, so that accumulating the respective filter output gives a measure of the amplitude of the response, with the benefit of coding gain.
In some embodiments, one sense electrode may be positioned caudally of the stimulus site, with another sense electrode being positioned rostrally of the stimulus site. In such embodiments, summing the signals sensed at each electrode will magnify the neural response signal while cancelling or attenuating stimulus artefact signals.
According to another aspect the present invention provides a computer program product comprising computer program code means to make a computer execute a procedure for measuring a neural response evoked by a stimulus, the computer program product comprising computer program code means for carrying out the method of the first aspect.
The neural response measurement obtained at each sense electrode may be conducted in accordance with the techniques set out in Daly (2007/0225767), the content of which is incorporated herein by reference. Additionally or alternatively, the neural response measurement may be conducted in accordance with the techniques set out in Nygard (U.S. Pat. No. 5,785,651), the content of which is incorporated herein by reference. Additionally or alternatively, the neural response measurement may be conducted in accordance with the techniques set out in the Australian provisional patent application No. 2011901817 in the name of National ICT Australia Ltd entitled “Method and apparatus for measurement of neural response” from which the present application claims priority.
An example of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
During spinal cord stimulation, a current is injected into electrodes on the array near the spinal cord. This initiates action potentials in dorsal column nerve fibres underlying (i.e. immediately adjacent to) the point of stimulation. These action potentials then travel away from the point of initiation, in both directions.
Dorsal column nerve fibers enter the dorsal columns from the dorsal roots and then ascend to the brain. Spinal cord stimulation and measurement mainly interacts with those fibres that lie on or near the surface of the cord, which due to the anatomy of the cord are those fibres that have just entered the cord from a nearby dorsal root. These surface fibres are the most likely to be stimulated, and their action potentials are the largest contributors to evoked response measurements. For any given stimulation event, either a fibre is triggered, or it is not. As the amplitude of the evoked potential for a single fiber is invariant, the amplitude of the recorded compound action potential relates to how many fibers were triggered. The number of fibres triggered by a given stimulus can be controlled by varying the stimulation current. The action potential generated manifests itself as a current through the nerve's cell membrane at its nodes of Ranvier, which sets up a potential in the surrounding tissue. The amplitude of this potential field for a given fiber of fixed diameter is constant as it travels along. When measured at a point electrode near the fiber, the potential field has a characteristic time-varying 3-lobed shape, as the action potential first approaches and then recedes from the electrode.
An evoked SCP will usually contain the responses of different nerve fibre types. As discussed previously herein, the velocity of a neural response depends on the diameter of the fibre, and different fibre types have different diameters and different conduction velocities. Recorded signals of a single nerve response obtained from respective electrodes spaced apart along the array 120 are delayed with respect to each other due to the travelling nature of the action potentials. The amplitude also generally falls with distance away from the stimulus site, as a result of factors such as nerve fiber paths running deeper into the cord or into the dorsal roots away from the array, spatial effects whereby nearby bone structures and the like can vary the sensitivity of a recording electrode, and dispersion wherein different fibers have differences in propagation velocity, smearing the compound potential at greater distances from the stimulus.
The present embodiment recognises that these phenomena can be exploited to reduce the effect of electrical noise in an SCP measurement, and to preferentially amplify the response of a specific fibre class. The technique of this embodiment of the invention is shown in
The inverse delay ti (or each such delay when not equal between each pair of adjacent electrodes) may be assumed to be proportional to electrode spacing, or may be established individually. For example an initial calibration recording may be made using a high stimulus amplitude, where the CEP amplitude is far above the noise levels. Recordings from different electrodes in response to the calibration stimulus can then be cross-correlated, and the optimal lags established between pairs of electrodes.
For each electrode the recordings made in response to the stimulus at 600 μA were averaged, giving a low-noise signal. These are then upsampled by a factor of 10, in order to be able to estimate delays with sub-sample accuracy. The time of occurrence of the first negative peak was measured, and the difference between peak times of adjacent electrodes taken as the inter-electrode delay. In this way, for N electrodes, N−1 delays were obtained experimentally.
Recordings made at lower currents, shown in
When applying the present invention to individual recordings (“shots”),
In a further embodiment shown in
If the delay t is varied while recording the amplitude of the SCP response, then the relationship between t and the output amplitude can be plotted as a “propagram”, as illustrated in
The position of each peak in the propagram of
As the signal propagates down a spinal cord it reduces in amplitude and disperses. Accordingly, the configuration of
A further variant is shown in
While
These embodiments thus recognise that each node of Ranvier of a nerve fibre acts as a current source expressing an action current which is fixed for a given diameter. Each node's action current is delayed with respect to the previous node (closer to the initiation) but not otherwise different. The nodes each act as a point source within a volume conductor, and consequently the recording at each electrode can be considered to be a weighted summation of all action currents via a spatial transimpedance function. The recorded system can in turn be modelled as a line current source, along which an action current translates; and the variation in conduction velocities represents a dispersion of the action current in space (and consequently time). Thus, each subsequent electrode's recording is a delayed and dispersed version of a nearer electrode's recording. By applying an inverse delay to each electrode's signal, the travel delay and the weighted mean of the dispersion delays can be cancelled. These signals can then be averaged, which reduces synchronous and uncorrelated noise, while retaining the portion of the signal that represents the travelling character.
In alternative embodiments, delayed-sum recordings which allow sufficient improvements in signal to noise ratio may permit use of implanted or skin-surface electrodes. Delayed-sum recordings may be made for either evoked or non-evoked potentials. Delayed sum recordings can be made in any part of the body where a signal is known to propagate according to a known path.
It will be appreciated by persons skilled in the art that numerous variations and/or modifications may be made to the invention as shown in the specific embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as broadly described. The present embodiments are, therefore, to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2011901817 | May 2011 | AU | national |
2011901822 | May 2011 | AU | national |
2011901824 | May 2011 | AU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/AU2012/000518 | 5/11/2012 | WO | 00 | 11/12/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/155190 | 11/22/2012 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140194772 A1 | Jul 2014 | US |