Research Alert

SUMMARY
Researchers have developed and tested for the first time in vivo a miniaturized, battery-free pacemaker that supports optical and electrical multisite stimulation. The new device is powered wirelessly, omitting the weight and bulk associated with battery power, along with the need to replace or recharge, thereby allowing for indefinite operation.

THE SITUATION
Sudden cardiac death is the largest cause of natural death in the United States with over 300,000 adult deaths each year. Researchers hope this new device will help decrease the number of these deaths.

THE BENEFIT
In current technology, the battery makes up the majority of the size and weight of a pacemaker. This can result in a largely visible device that sits on the upper chest and can cause significant dissatisfaction for patients.

By decreasing the size of a wireless pacemaker to about the size of a dime, the goal is for doctors to one day place several pacemakers across the heart. Having multiple wireless pacemakers on the heart at once can improve the quality of resynchronization therapy as the devices can be programmed externally to synchronize cardiac excitation and contraction, thus making the devices more efficient, effective and comfortable for patients.

EMBARGOED INFORMATION
The paper, “Wireless, battery-free, fully implantable multimodal and multisite pacemakers for applications in small animal models,” will be published in Nature Communications on Tuesday, Dec. 17, 2019, at 5 a.m. EST.

Igor Efimov, the Alisann and Terry Collins Professor of Biomedical Engineering in the George Washington University School of Engineering and Applied Science, is available to discuss the newly developed pacemaker and the need for continued work in this field.

Journal Link: Nature Communications