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Research progress of biomaterial-mediated brain-computer interfaces in neural rehabilitation

Xiangxiang Yu et al · Shanghai Chinese Clinical Medicine Press Co., Ltd · 2026

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Neurological disorders such as post-stroke hemiplegia, spinal cord injury, and Parkinson disease represent a major global health burden. Brain-computer interface (BCI), which creates direct communication pathways between the nervous system and external devices, offers a promising strategy for functional restoration. The long-term efficacy of such BCI fundamentally depends on the performance of biomaterials at the neural interface. Ideal materials must concurrently satisfy biocompatibility, electrical conductivity, enduring chemical stability, and mechanical compatibility with brain tissue. This review systematically outlines the application of conductive polymers, inorganic nanomaterials, natural biomaterials, and composites in BCI, with a focus on how advanced designs, such as bionic and encapsulated electrodes, improve signal fidelity and surgical feasibility through structural innovation. It further summarizes key material-modification techniques and analyzes the complex foreign-body response orchestrated by microglia, astrocytes, and peripheral immune cells. Finally, it provides insights into future research directions and clinical translation of BCI-based neurorehabilitation, while highlighting critical challenges including long-term biosafety and the establishment of standardized evaluation frameworks, aiming to bridge the gap between laboratory innovation and effective clinical deployment.

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APA 7

al, X. Y. E. (2026). Research progress of biomaterial-mediated brain-computer interfaces in neural rehabilitation. https://doi.org/10.12025/j.issn.1008-6358.2026.20251584

MLA

al, Xiangxiang Yu et. "Research progress of biomaterial-mediated brain-computer interfaces in neural rehabilitation." 2026. https://doi.org/10.12025/j.issn.1008-6358.2026.20251584.

Chicago

al, Xiangxiang Yu et. 2026. "Research progress of biomaterial-mediated brain-computer interfaces in neural rehabilitation.". https://doi.org/10.12025/j.issn.1008-6358.2026.20251584.

Harvard

al, X. Y. E. 2026, Research progress of biomaterial-mediated brain-computer interfaces in neural rehabilitation, Shanghai Chinese Clinical Medicine Press Co, Ltd, available at: https://doi.org/10.12025/j.issn.1008-6358.2026.20251584 [Accessed 28 Jun. 2026].

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Título
Research progress of biomaterial-mediated brain-computer interfaces in neural rehabilitation
Autor / colaboradores
Xiangxiang Yu et al
Editorial
Shanghai Chinese Clinical Medicine Press Co., Ltd
Año de publicación
2026
ISSN
1008-6358
ISSN
1008-6358
Idioma
eng

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