Solomon Ethan A, Wang Jeffrey B, Oya Hiroyuki, Howard Matthew A, Trapp Nicholas T, Uitermarkt Brandt D, Boes Aaron D, Keller Corey J
Dept. of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University Medical Center, Palo Alto CA 94305.
Biophysics Graduate Program, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA 94305.
bioRxiv. 2023 Nov 19:2023.08.09.552524. doi: 10.1101/2023.08.09.552524.
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is increasingly deployed in the treatment of neuropsychiatric illness, under the presumption that stimulation of specific cortical targets can alter ongoing neural activity and cause circuit-level changes in brain function. While the electrophysiological effects of TMS have been extensively studied with scalp electroencephalography (EEG), this approach is most useful for evaluating low-frequency neural activity at the cortical surface. As such, little is known about how TMS perturbs rhythmic activity among deeper structures - such as the hippocampus and amygdala - and whether stimulation can alter higher-frequency oscillations. Recent work has established that TMS can be safely used in patients with intracranial electrodes (iEEG), allowing for direct neural recordings at sufficient spatiotemporal resolution to examine localized oscillatory responses across the frequency spectrum. To that end, we recruited 17 neurosurgical patients with indwelling electrodes and recorded neural activity while patients underwent repeated trials of single-pulse TMS at several cortical sites. Stimulation to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) drove widespread low-frequency increases (3-8Hz) in frontolimbic cortices, as well as high-frequency decreases (30-110Hz) in frontotemporal areas, including the hippocampus. Stimulation to parietal cortex specifically provoked low-frequency responses in the medial temporal lobe. While most low-frequency activity was consistent with brief evoked responses, anterior frontal regions exhibited induced theta oscillations following DLPFC stimulation. Taken together, we established that non-invasive stimulation can (1) provoke a mixture of low-frequency evoked power and induced theta oscillations and (2) suppress high-frequency activity in deeper brain structures not directly accessed by stimulation itself.
经颅磁刺激(TMS)越来越多地应用于神经精神疾病的治疗,其前提是刺激特定的皮质靶点可以改变正在进行的神经活动,并导致脑功能在回路水平上发生变化。虽然TMS的电生理效应已通过头皮脑电图(EEG)进行了广泛研究,但这种方法最适用于评估皮质表面的低频神经活动。因此,对于TMS如何干扰海马体和杏仁核等更深层结构之间的节律性活动,以及刺激是否能改变高频振荡,人们知之甚少。最近的研究表明,TMS可以安全地用于植入颅内电极(iEEG)的患者,从而能够以足够的时空分辨率进行直接神经记录,以检查整个频谱上的局部振荡反应。为此,我们招募了17名植入电极的神经外科患者,在患者于几个皮质部位接受单脉冲TMS的重复试验时记录神经活动。刺激背外侧前额叶皮质(DLPFC)导致额边缘皮质广泛出现低频增加(3 - 8Hz),以及额颞叶区域(包括海马体)出现高频降低(30 - 110Hz)。刺激顶叶皮质特别引发了内侧颞叶的低频反应。虽然大多数低频活动与短暂的诱发反应一致,但前额叶前部区域在DLPFC刺激后出现了诱发的theta振荡。综上所述,我们确定非侵入性刺激可以(1)引发低频诱发功率和诱发theta振荡的混合,以及(2)抑制刺激本身无法直接触及的更深层脑结构中的高频活动。