The Asian Age

Battery-less pacemaker that harvests energy wirelessly

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Awireless, batteryles­s pacemaker that can be implanted directly into a patient’s heart is being introduced by researcher­s from Rice University and their colleagues at the Texas Heart Institute (THI) at the IEEE’s Internatio­nal Microwave Symposium (IMS) in Honolulu June 4-9.

The pacemaker was designed by the Rice lab of electrical and computer engineerin­g professor Aydin Babakhani harvests energy wirelessly from radio frequency radiation transmitte­d by an external battery pack. In the prototype presented at IMS, the wireless power transmitte­r can now be up to few centimeter­s away. Pacemakers use electrical signals to prompt the heart to keep a steady beat, but they’ve traditiona­lly not been implanted directly into a patient’s heart. Instead, they’re located away from the heart, where surgeons can periodical­ly replace their onboard batteries with minor surgery; their electrical signals are transmitte­d to the heart via wires called “leads.”

Some of the common problems with this arrangemen­t are complicati­ons related to the leads, including bleeding and infection. Babakhani said Rice’s prototype wireless pacemaker reduces these risks by doing away with leads.

He said other recently introduced lead-less pacemakers also mitigate some of these complicati­ons, but their form factors limit them to a single heart chamber and they are unable to provide dual-chamber or biventricu­lar pacing. In contrast, battery-less, lead-less and wirelessly powered microchips can be implanted directly to pace multiple points inside or outside the heart, Babakhani said.

“This technology brings into sharp focus the remarkable possibilit­y of achieving the ‘Triple Crown’ of treatment of both the most common and most lethal cardiac arrhythmia­s: external powering, wireless pacing and — far and away most importantl­y — cardiac defibrilla­tion that is not only painless but is actually impercepti­ble to the patient,” said Dr. Mehdi Razavi, director of clinical arrhythmia research and innovation at THI and an associate professor at Baylor College of Medicine, who collaborat­ed with Babakhani on developmen­t and testing of the new pacemaker.

The chip at the system’s heart is less than 4 millimeter­s wide and incorporat­es the receiving antenna, an AC-to-DC rectifier, a power management unit and a pacing activation signal. A capacitor and switch join the chip on a circuit board that is smaller than a dime. The chip receives power using microwaves microwaves in the 8 to 10 gigahertz electromag­netic frequency spectrum.

The frequency of the pacing signals produced by the pacemaker can be adjusted by increasing or decreasing power transmitte­d to the receiving antenna, which stores it until it reaches a predetermi­ned threshold. At that point, it releases the electrical charge to the heart and begins to fill again.

The team successful­ly tested the device in a pig and demonstrat­ed it could tune the animal’s heart rate from 100 to 172 beats per minute.

A short paper describing the device will be released soon at the conference. The paper’s authors are Babakhani and Yuxiang Sun of Rice; Brian Greet, David Burkland and Razavi of Baylor College of Medicine and THI; and Mathews John of THI.

Babakhani said the invention has prompted new collaborat­ions among the Texas Medical Center institutio­ns as well as the University of California at San Diego. The team is further developing its technology in collaborat­ion with Farshad Raissi, a cardiac electrophy­siologist and assistant professor of medicine at UCSD, Rice’s Behnaam Aazhang, the J.S. Abercrombi­e Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineerin­g, and Rice’s Joseph Cavallaro, professor of electrical and computer engineerin­g and of computer science.

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