Peripheral nerve injury triggers slow axonal regeneration and irreversible muscle atrophy due to the absence of synchronous neuromuscular repair strategies. We present a fully implantable, self-powered Mechano-driven Electro-adaptable Bioelectronic Implant System (MEBIS) enabling coordinated mechanical-electrical stimulation for integrated neuromuscular regeneration. A programmable robotic actuator delivers quantifiable mechanical massage to denervated muscle, enhancing perfusion while deforming a nanogenerator that converts motion into localized electrical cues. These signals stimulate injured nerves, inducing intracellular Ca2+ elevation and Ca2+-dependent signaling, which activates downstream HIF-1α/AMPK pathways to accelerate Schwann cell activity, angiogenesis, and axonal regrowth. This mechano-electro-biochemical cascade couples muscle preservation with nerve regeneration in a closed loop, overcoming depth limitations and output instability of conventional stimulators. Validated in rat and porcine models, MEBIS significantly improves functional recovery, electrophysiology, and histomorphometry without biocompatibility concerns. Our platform establishes a scalable, feedback-controlled paradigm for precision repair and rehabilitation after peripheral nerve injury. Peripheral nerve injury lacks effective strategies for synchronous neuromuscular repair. Here, the authors develop a fully implantable self-powered mechano-electrical bioelectronic system (MEBIS) that integrates programmable mechanical stimulation with adaptive electrical signaling to enable coordinated nerve regeneration and muscle preservation, significantly improving functional recovery.
Nan et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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