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Multifunctional Polymer Fiber Probes for Biomedical Application

Biomedical devices play a crucial role in the healthcare system, enabling more effective treatments, less invasive procedures, and more precise diagnoses. Due to these compelling reasons, development of new biomedical devices and biomaterials have always been in high demand. Exploring and refining fabrication methods are essential to the development of new biomedical devices. Some of the common fabrication methods include microfabrication methods (photolithography and soft lithography), 3D printing (additive manufacturing), laser machining, thermal drawing, and electrospinning. The choice of fabrication methods heavily depends on the materials, geometry, and functionalities of biomedical devices. Currently, the thermal drawing process has proven to be an excellent scalable fabrication platform for neural interface, tissue engineering, tumor/cancer treatment, soft robotics, and smart textiles. This Ph.D. dissertation summarizes my research on the fabrication and validation of thermally drawn multifunctional polymer fiber probes for modern biomedical applications, primarily in the fields of neural interfaces and tumor treatments.
Understanding the neural basis of behavior requires monitoring and manipulating combinations of physiological elements and their interactions in behaving animals. Utilizing the thermal drawing process, we developed T-DOpE (Tapered Drug delivery, Optical stimulation, and Electrophysiology) probes and Tetro-DOpE (Tetrode-like Drug delivery, Optical stimulation, and Electrophysiology) probes that can simultaneously record and manipulate neural activity in behaving rodents. Taking advantage of the triple-functionality, we monitored local field potential (LFP) while manipulating cannabinoid receptors (CB1R; microfluidic agonist delivery) and CA1 neuronal activity using optogenetics. Focal infusion of CB1R agonist downregulated theta and sharp wave-ripple oscillations (SPW-Rs). Furthermore, we found that CB1R activation reduces sharp wave-ripples by impairing the innate SPW-R-generating ability of the CA1 circuit.
Microscale electroporation devices are mostly restricted to in vitro experiments (i.e., microchannel and microcapillary). We developed a flexible microscale electroporation fiber probe through a thermal drawing process and femtosecond laser micromachining techniques. The novel fiber microprobes enable microscale electroporation and arbitrarily select the cell groups of interest to electroporate. Successful reversible and irreversible microscale electroporation was observed in a 3D collagen scaffold (seeded with U251 human glioma cells) using fluorescent staining.
Leveraging the scalable thermal drawing process, we envision a wide distribution of multifunctional polymer fiber probes in research facilities and hospitals. Along with the fiber probes presented in this dissertation, additional insight and future perspective on thermally drawn biomedical devices are discussed. / Doctor of Philosophy / The thermal drawing process is a versatile and scalable platform for fabricating functional fiber technology. The process was formerly adapted from fabrication method for silica optical fibers, widely used in telecommunication (e.g., telephone, internet, cable TV, etc.). To name some functionalities of these fibers, they can move, hear, sense touch, change colors, harvest and store energy, record and manipulate brain activity, and ablate tumors. As imagined, these functionalities are derived from the unique geometry and functional materials embedded along the fiber. Therefore, developing the fiber design tailored to a specific application is a critical step to making a successful fiber product. In this dissertation, I will present my work on biomedical devices fabricated with the thermal drawing process and their application in neuroscience and tumor/cancer treatment.
Utilizing the thermal drawing process, we developed neural interfaces that can be implanted into the deep brain and record and simultaneously manipulate the neural activity. These neural interfaces (Chapter 2,3; T-DOpE and Tetro-DOpE probes, respectively) are able to record both local field potentials (LFP; activity of thousands or more neurons) and single action potentials (single on/off signal from individual neurons nearby). By manipulating the gene expression, we can control the activity of neurons with specific light (λ= 470nm; blue light) exposure. We implemented optical waveguide in our probes to guide light from a laser source to the tip of the probe and manipulate the neural activity. Furthermore, we fabricated micro-channels within the device to enable focal drug delivery at the tip of the device. Using the T-DOpE probe, we studied the effect of local synthetic cannabinoid injection in the hippocampus. We found that the local injection of the drug in hippocampus CA1 makes neurons incapable of generating sharp wave-ripples (a neural signal associated with memory).
Electroporation is a biophysical phenomenon where short high electric field pulses introduce nanoscale defects in cell membrane. These defects can cause unstable cellular homeostasis and eventually leads to cell death. Due to reduced treatment time, no heat effect, and tissue selectivity, electroporation has been used in clinical trials for cancer treatments. Using the thermal drawing process and laser micromachining techniques, we developed a flexible microscale electroporation fiber probe capable of ablating tumor cells.
Due to the low-cost and scalability of thermal drawing process, we envision the use of thermally drawn functional fiber technology in biomedical fields. In this dissertation, I also address some challenges and future directions of thermally drawn functional fibers in biomedical fields.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/119468
Date17 June 2024
CreatorsKim, Jongwoon
ContributorsElectrical Engineering, Jia, Xiaoting, English, Daniel F., Wang, Anbo, Johnson, Blake, Zhou, Wei
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
FormatETD, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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