A 3D computational model of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation for estimating Aß tactile nerve fiber excitability

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Abstract

Tactile sensory feedback plays an important role in our daily life. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) is widely accepted to produce artificial tactile sensation. To explore the underlying mechanism of tactile sensation under TENS, this paper presented a novel 3D TENS computational model including an active Aß tactile nerve fiber (TNF) model and a forearm finite element model with the fine-layered skin structure. The conduction velocity vs. fiber diameter and strength-duration relationships in this combined TENS model matched well with experimental data. Based on this validated TENS model, threshold current variation were further investigated under different stimulating electrode sizes with varied fiber diameters. The computational results showed that the threshold current intensity increased with electrode size, and larger nerve fibers were recruited at lower current intensities. These results were comparable to our psychophysical experimental data from six healthy subjects. This novel 3D TENS model would further guide the floorplan of the surface electrodes, and the stimulating paradigms for tactile sensory feedback.

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Zhu, K., Li, L., Wei, X., & Sui, X. (2017). A 3D computational model of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation for estimating Aß tactile nerve fiber excitability. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 11(MAY). https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2017.00250

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