Publication | Open Access
Rehabilitation exercise–driven symbiotic electrical stimulation system accelerating bone regeneration
118
Citations
67
References
2024
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringBiomedical EngineeringElectrical Stimulation DevicesOrthopaedic SurgeryRegenerative MedicineStimulation DeviceSynthetic Bone SubstituteApplied PhysiologyRehabilitation EngineeringElectrical StimulationElectrical Stimulation TherapyImplantable SensorRehabilitationImplantable DevicesImplantable DevicePhysical TherapyPiezoelectric NanogeneratorsExercise PhysiologyBioelectronicsElectrophysiologyMedicineSelf-powered Nanodevices
Electrical stimulation can effectively accelerate bone healing. However, the substantial size and weight of electrical stimulation devices result in reduced patient benefits and compliance. It remains a challenge to establish a flexible and lightweight implantable microelectronic stimulator for bone regeneration. Here, we use self-powered technology to develop an electric pulse stimulator without circuits and batteries, which removes the problems of weight, volume, and necessary rigid packaging. The fully implantable bone defect electrical stimulation (BD-ES) system combines a hybrid tribo/piezoelectric nanogenerator to provide biphasic electric pulses in response to rehabilitation exercise with a conductive bioactive hydrogel. BD-ES can enhance multiple osteogenesis-related biological processes, including calcium ion import and osteogenic differentiation. In a rat model of critical-sized femoral defects, the bone defect was reversed by electrical stimulation therapy with BD-ES and subsequent bone mineralization, and the femur completely healed within 6 weeks. This work is expected to advance the development of symbiotic electrical stimulation therapy devices without batteries and circuits.
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