PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2025

Adhesive Nonfibrotic Bioelectronic Interfaces on Diverse Peripheral Nerves for Long-Term Functional Neuromodulation

Moon H, Aymon BFG, et al.

Science Advances

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Pennsylvania State University

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study introduces an ultrathin, adhesive, hydrogel-based nerve interface (A-HNI) engineered to conform to diverse peripheral nerves without eliciting fibrotic encapsulation. The A-HNI integrates a conductive polymer–hydrogel composite, an adhesive zwitterionic surface layer, and a mechanically compliant architecture that matches nerve deformation during locomotion. Across multiple rodent nerve targets—including sciatic, tibial, and vagus—the device maintained intimate contact for more than 120 days while avoiding the capsule formation typically induced by implanted electrodes. Electrophysiological studies demonstrated stable stimulation thresholds, reduced impedance drift, and improved signal-to-noise ratio. Long-term histology confirmed minimal macrophage infiltration and negligible collagen deposition at the interface. Mechanical characterization revealed that the composite hydrogel exhibits near-nerve-matched modulus and high stretchability, supporting its ability to accommodate physiological strain without delamination or mechanical failure. Together, these findings demonstrate a fibrosis-free neuromodulation platform with broad applicability to chronic peripheral nerve interfaces.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

UStretch

Mechanical testing of the adhesive hydrogel–electrode composite was performed using a CellScale UStretch tensile testing system equipped with a 4.4 N load cell (Materials and Methods, p. 10). Rectangular hydrogel specimens were mounted between opposing clamps and extended at controlled strain rates to quantify tensile strength, maximum stretch ratio, and elastic modulus. The UStretch provided force–displacement curves used to evaluate hydrogel reinforcement effects, characterize elastic–plastic transition behavior, and confirm that the composite withstands physiologic nerve deformation without fracture. These mechanical data supported the design criteria for long-term, conformal neural interfaces.
AUTHORS

Hyunmin Moon, Bastien F. G. Aymon, Jue Deng, Tao Zhou, Vincent Prevosto, Fan Wang, Jingjing Wu, Xuanhe Zhao.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Science Advances

YEAR

2025

INSTITUTIONS

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Pennsylvania State University

COUNTRIES

United States

INSTRUMENT USED

UStretch

TESTING METHODS

Fatigue TestingTensile Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Adhesives and Sealants TestingFibrosis & Tissue RemodelingHydrogel Mechanical TestingNeural Tissue & CNS MechanicsPeripheral Nerve Regeneration & PNS MechanicsWearable Bioelectronics

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