DOI: 10.1002/adem.202300735 ISSN:

Helical Microfilament Electrode‐based Semi‐implantable Biosensors for in vivo Electrochemical Detection

Mengyi He, Shuang Huang, Shantao Zheng, Chuanjie Yao, Zhengjie Liu, Xinshuo Huang, Xiangling Li, Baoming Liang, Ji Wang, Yan Li, Hui-Jiuan Chen, Jing Liu, Xi Xie
  • Condensed Matter Physics
  • General Materials Science

Semi‐implantable devices have shown potential for real‐time sensing of physiological information in vivo. For glucose detection in diabetes, semi‐implantable electrodes have the ability to measure glucose concentration directly from interstitial fluid (ISF) with high accuracy and continuous monitoring performance. However, electrochemical detection by the amperometric method is limited by the electrode size, which could restrict signal magnitude and sensitivity of the implantable microfilament electrode. To address this limitation, a semi‐implantable helical microfilament‐based glucose electrode (HMGE) was developed. The helical structure of the HMGE enhanced the electrochemical sensing area, while the coating with carbon nanotube (CNT) and (3,4‐ethylene‐dioxythiophene) polystyrene sulfonate (PEDOT:PSS) provided an electron transfer interface for electrochemical sensing. The HMGE exhibited high selectivity and sensitivity for glucose detection. Through in vitro experiments, the sensitivity of HMGE was improved by about 7 times compared with that of the non‐helical structure. In vivo studies in rats demonstrated that HMGE system could continuously monitor glucose concentration changes in ISF with reasonable accuracy after signal calibrations. Furthermore, a circuit sensing system and smartphone application were developed to support the operation of HMGE system as a phenotype. The HMGE presented a promising semi‐implantable device for monitoring various electrolytes, metabolites, and biochemical signals in vivo.

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