PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Long-term implanted cOFM probe causes minimal tissue reaction in the brain.

  • Thomas Birngruber,
  • Arijit Ghosh,
  • Sonja Hochmeister,
  • Martin Asslaber,
  • Thomas Kroath,
  • Thomas R Pieber,
  • Frank Sinner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0090221
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. e90221

Abstract

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This study investigated the histological tissue reaction to long-term implanted cerebral open flow microperfusion (cOFM) probes in the frontal lobe of the rat brain. Most probe-based cerebral fluid sampling techniques are limited in application time due to the formation of a glial scar that hinders substance exchange between brain tissue and the probe. A glial scar not only functions as a diffusion barrier but also alters metabolism and signaling in extracellular brain fluid. cOFM is a recently developed probe-based technique to continuously sample extracellular brain fluid with an intact blood-brain barrier. After probe implantation, a 2 week healing period is needed for blood-brain barrier reestablishment. Therefore, cOFM probes need to stay in place and functional for at least 15 days after implantation to ensure functionality. Probe design and probe materials are optimized to evoke minimal tissue reaction even after a long implantation period. Qualitative and quantitative histological tissue analysis revealed no continuous glial scar formation around the cOFM probe 30 days after implantation and only a minor tissue reaction regardless of perfusion of the probe.