Research and Development, Soterix Medical, Woodbridge, New Jersey, United States of America.
Smead Aerospace Engineering Sciences Department, College of Engineering and Applied Science, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Aug 26;19(8):e0309007. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0309007. eCollection 2024.
Galvanic Vestibular Stimulation (GVS) is a non-invasive electrical stimulation technique that is typically used to probe the vestibular system. When using direct current or very low frequency sine, GVS causes postural sway or perception of illusory (virtual) motions. GVS is commonly delivered using two electrodes placed at the mastoids, however, placements involving additional electrodes / locations have been employed. Our objective was to systematically evaluate all known GVS electrode placements, compare induced current flow, and how it relates to the archetypal sway and virtual motions. The ultimate goal is to help users in having a better understanding of the effects of different placements.
We simulated seven GVS electrode placements with same total injected current using an ultra-high resolution model. Induced electric field (EF) patterns at the cortical and the level of vestibular organs (left and right) were determined. A range of current flow metrics including potential factors such as inter-electrode separation, percentage of current entering the cranial cavity, and symmetricity were calculated. Finally, we relate current flow to reported GVS motions.
As expected, current flow patterns are electrode placement specific. Placements with two electrodes generally result in higher EF magnitude. Placements with four electrodes result in lower percentage of current entering the cranial cavity. Symmetric placements do not result in similar EF values in the left and the right organs respectively- highlighting inherent anatomical asymmetry of the human head. Asymmetric placements were found to induce as much as ~3-fold higher EF in one organ over the other. The percentage of current entering the cranial cavity varies between ~15% and ~40% depending on the placement.
We expect our study to advance understanding of GVS and provide insight on probable mechanism of action of a certain electrode placement choice. The dataset generated across several metrics will support hypothesis testing relating empirical outcomes to current flow patterns. Further, the differences in current flow will guide stimulation strategy (what placement and how much scalp current to use) and facilitate a quantitatively informed rational / optimal decision.
电前庭刺激(GVS)是一种非侵入性的电刺激技术,通常用于探测前庭系统。当使用直流电或极低频率正弦波时,GVS 会导致姿势摆动或感知虚幻(虚拟)运动。GVS 通常使用放置在乳突上的两个电极进行传递,但是也已经采用了涉及其他电极/位置的放置。我们的目标是系统地评估所有已知的 GVS 电极放置位置,比较感应电流的流动方式,以及它与典型的摆动和虚拟运动的关系。最终目标是帮助用户更好地理解不同放置位置的效果。
我们使用超高分辨率模型模拟了七种具有相同总注入电流的 GVS 电极放置位置。确定了皮质和前庭器官(左右)水平的感应电场(EF)模式。计算了包括电极间距离、进入颅腔电流百分比和对称性等潜在因素的电流流度量。最后,我们将电流流动与报告的 GVS 运动联系起来。
正如预期的那样,电流流动模式是电极放置位置特有的。两个电极的放置位置通常会产生更高的 EF 幅度。四个电极的放置位置会导致进入颅腔的电流百分比降低。对称放置不会导致左右器官的 EF 值分别相似,这突出了人头的固有解剖不对称性。不对称放置被发现会导致一个器官的 EF 值比另一个器官高 3 倍左右。进入颅腔的电流百分比根据放置位置的不同而在 15%至 40%之间变化。
我们预计我们的研究将推进对 GVS 的理解,并为特定电极放置选择的作用机制提供见解。跨几个度量标准生成的数据集将支持与电流流动模式相关的经验结果的假设检验。此外,电流流动的差异将指导刺激策略(使用哪种放置位置和多少头皮电流),并促进定量信息驱动的理性/最佳决策。