Department of Biomedical Engineering and Computational Science, Aalto University School of Science, Espoo, Finland.
PLoS One. 2011;6(8):e24002. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0024002. Epub 2011 Aug 26.
Hemodynamic responses evoked by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) can be measured with near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS). This study demonstrates that cerebral neuronal activity is not their sole contributor. We compared bilateral NIRS responses following brain stimulation to those from the shoulders evoked by shoulder stimulation and contrasted them with changes in circulatory parameters. The left primary motor cortex of ten subjects was stimulated with 8-s repetitive TMS trains at 0.5, 1, and 2 Hz at an intensity of 75% of the resting motor threshold. Hemoglobin concentration changes were measured with NIRS on the stimulated and contralateral hemispheres. The photoplethysmograph (PPG) amplitude and heart rate were recorded as well. The left shoulder of ten other subjects was stimulated with the same protocol while the hemoglobin concentration changes in both shoulders were measured. In addition to PPG amplitude and heart rate, the pulse transit time was recorded. The brain stimulation reduced the total hemoglobin concentration (HbT) on the stimulated and contralateral hemispheres. The shoulder stimulation reduced HbT on the stimulated shoulder but increased it contralaterally. The waveforms of the HbT responses on the stimulated hemisphere and shoulder correlated strongly with each other (r = 0.65-0.87). All circulatory parameters were also affected. The results suggest that the TMS-evoked NIRS signal includes components that do not result directly from cerebral neuronal activity. These components arise from local effects of TMS on the vasculature. Also global circulatory effects due to arousal may affect the responses. Thus, studies involving TMS-evoked NIRS responses should be carefully controlled for physiological artifacts and effective artifact removal methods are needed to draw inferences about TMS-evoked brain activity.
经颅磁刺激(TMS)诱发的血液动力学反应可以用近红外光谱(NIRS)来测量。本研究表明,神经元活动并不是其唯一的贡献者。我们比较了脑刺激后双侧 NIRS 反应与肩部刺激引起的肩部反应,并将其与循环参数的变化进行了对比。十名受试者的左侧初级运动皮层接受了 8 秒重复 TMS 刺激,刺激强度为静息运动阈值的 75%,频率分别为 0.5、1 和 2 Hz。用 NIRS 测量刺激和对侧半球的血红蛋白浓度变化。同时记录光体积描记图(PPG)幅度和心率。另外十名受试者的左侧肩部接受了相同的刺激方案,同时测量了两侧肩部的血红蛋白浓度变化。除了 PPG 幅度和心率外,还记录了脉搏传导时间。脑刺激降低了刺激和对侧半球的总血红蛋白浓度(HbT)。肩部刺激降低了刺激肩部的 HbT,但对侧增加了。刺激半球和肩部的 HbT 反应的波形彼此之间具有很强的相关性(r = 0.65-0.87)。所有循环参数也受到影响。结果表明,TMS 诱发的 NIRS 信号包含的成分并非直接来自神经元活动。这些成分来自 TMS 对血管的局部影响。由于觉醒引起的全身循环效应也可能影响反应。因此,涉及 TMS 诱发的 NIRS 反应的研究应仔细控制生理伪影,并需要有效的伪影去除方法,以便对 TMS 诱发的脑活动做出推断。