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Neuroscientists
Connect Neural Activity And Blood Flow In New Brain Stimulation
Technique
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Illustration
of the visual cortex during transcranial magnetic
stimulation (TMS).
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In
this non-invasive brain stimulation technique, pulses of current
(arrows) are passed through a figure-eight shaped coil placed
above the scalp. The induced electric field elicits long-lasting
alterations in neural activity which can be measured with blood
flow-based imaging methods.
Credit:
Elena Allen / UC Berkeley
Neuroscientists at the
University of California, Berkeley, have for the first time
measured the electrical activity of nerve cells and correlated it
to changes in blood flow in response to transcranial magnetic
stimulation (TMS), a noninvasive method to stimulate neurons in
the brain.
Their findings, reported in the
Sept. 28 issue of the journal Science, could substantially
improve the effectiveness of brain stimulation as a therapeutic
and research tool.
With technological advances
over the past decade, TMS has emerged as a promising new tool in
neuroscience to treat various clinical disorders, including
depression, and to help researchers better understand how the
brain functions and is organized.
TMS works by generating
magnetic pulses via a wire coil placed on top of the scalp. The
pulses pass harmlessly through the skull and induce short, weak
electrical currents that alter neural activity. Yet the relative
scarcity of data describing the basic effects of TMS, and the
uncertainty in how the method achieves its effects, prompted the
researchers to conduct their own study.
"There are potentially
limitless applications in both the treatment of clinical
disorders as well as in fundamental research in neuroscience,"
said Elena Allen, a graduate student at UC Berkeley's Helen Wills
Neuroscience Institute (HWNI) and co-lead author of the study.
"For example, TMS could be used to help determine what parts
of the brain are used in object recognition or speech
comprehension. However, to develop effective applications of TMS,
it is first necessary to determine basic information about how
the technique works."
Other techniques for studying
neural activity in humans, such as functional magnetic resonance
imaging (fMRI) or electroencephalogram (EEG), only measure
ongoing activity. TMS, on the other hand, offers the opportunity
to non-invasively and reversibly manipulate neural activity in a
specific brain area.
In a set of experiments, the
researchers used TMS to generate weak, electrical currents in the
brain with quick 2- to 4-second bursts of magnetic pulses to the
visual cortex of cats. Direct measurements of the electrical
discharge of nerve cells in the region in response to the pulses
revealed that TMS predictably caused an initial flurry of neural
activity, significantly increasing cell firing rates. This
increased activity lasted 30 to 60 seconds, followed by a
relatively lengthy 5 to 10 minutes of decreased activity.
What the researchers were able
to determine for the first time was that the neural response to
TMS correlated directly to changes in blood flow to the region.
Using oxygen sensors and optical imaging, the researchers found
that an initial increase in blood flow was followed by a longer
period of decreased activity after the magnetic pulses were
applied.
"This long-lasting
suppression of activity was surprising," said Brian Pasley,
a graduate student at HWNI and co-lead author of the study.
"We're still trying to understand the physiological
mechanisms underlying this effect, but it has implications for
how TMS could be used in clinical applications."
The critical confirmation of
the connection between blood flow and neural activity means that
researchers can use TMS to alter neural activity, and then use
fMRI, which tracks blood flow changes, to assess how the nerve
cells respond over time.
"One of the most exciting
applications of TMS is the ability to non-invasively modify
neural activity in specific ways," said Pasley. "The
brain is malleable, so brain stimulation may be used to alter and
promote specific functions, like learning and memory, or suppress
abnormal activity that underlies neurological disorders. If we
can figure out the right ways to stimulate the brain, TMS will
likely be useful in attempts to improve neural function."
The researchers noted that one
of the difficulties in using TMS for specific applications is the
fact that its effects vary in different brain regions and
individuals.
"Using TMS is inherently
challenging because its neural effects can be so variable,"
said Ralph Freeman, UC Berkeley professor of vision science and
optometry and principal investigator of the study. "Fortunately,
we can determine empirically what the end result is by making
measurements with fMRI. This should be valuable to clinicians who
must evaluate the effectiveness of a stimulation treatment. In
turn, fMRI may serve as a guide to determine adjustments in
treatment parameters."
The study was also co-authored
by Thang Duong, a UC Berkeley graduate student in vision science.
The National Eye Institute of the National Institutes of Health
and the National Science Foundation helped support this research.
Source:
University of California, Berkeley
Time
Stamp: 9/27/2007 at 11:51:28 PM CST

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