| Literature DB >> 20577584 |
Aslihan Selimbeyoglu1, Josef Parvizi.
Abstract
In this review, we summarize the subjective experiential phenomena and behavioral changes that are caused by electrical stimulation of the cerebral cortex or subcortical nuclei in awake and conscious human subjects. Our comprehensive review contains a detailed summary of the data obtained from electrical brain stimulation (EBS) in humans in the last 100 years. Findings from the EBS studies may provide an additional layer of information about the neural correlates of cognition and behavior in healthy human subjects, or the neuroanatomy of illusions and hallucinations in patients with psychosis and the brain symptomatogenic zones in patients with epilepsy. We discuss some fundamental concepts, issues, and remaining questions that have defined the field of EBS, and review the current state of knowledge about the mechanism of action of EBS suggesting that the modulation of activity within a localized, but distributed, neuroanatomical network might explain the perceptual and behavioral phenomena that are reported during focal electrical stimulation of the human brain.Entities:
Keywords: behavior; cognition; human brain mapping; intracranial electrophysiology; neuromodulation; neurostimulation
Year: 2010 PMID: 20577584 PMCID: PMC2889679 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2010.00046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Acute effects of cortical and subcortical stimulations.
| Brain region | Brodmann area | Acute effect of stimulation | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensory | Motor | Autonomic | Emotional | Cognitive | ||||||||
| Superior frontal gyrus | 6, 8, 10 | • “Sensorial illusions” | • Smooth and saccadic eye movements | • Emotional feelings | ||||||||
| Middle frontal gyrus | 8, 10, 46 | • Motor response (e.g., locomotion | • Acalculia | |||||||||
| Inferior frontal gyrus | 44, 45 | • Oroalimentary automatisms | • Errors of naming and syntactic morphology | |||||||||
| Orbitofrontal and ventromedial frontal cortex | 8, 11, 25 | • Epigastric sensations | • Twitching | • Memory recall | ||||||||
| Anterior cingulate cortex | 24, 32 | • Epigastric sensations | • Motor responses (finger, lip, tongue, head, and eye movements) | • Blushing | • Anxiety | |||||||
| Cingulate motor area (anterior) | 24c | • Tonic posturing | ||||||||||
| Presupplemetary motor area (pre-SMA) | 6 | • Oroalimentary automatisms (e.g., lip smacking, chewing movements) | ||||||||||
| Supplementary motor area | 6 | • Illusion of movement | • Laughter without mirth | • Laughter with mirth | ||||||||
| Premotor area | 6 | • Unconscious movement | • Impairment in naming | |||||||||
| Motor area | 4, 6 | • Somatic sensations | • Movement or twitching of body parts in somatotopic order | |||||||||
| Insula | 13, 14, 15, 16 | • Unpleasant sensation of suffocation | • Automatisms | • Cardiovascular changes (e.g., bradycardia) | • Sensation of unreality | • Feeling of “going into a trance” | ||||||
| Temporoinsular junction | – | • Pain, rotatory sensation of the head, feeling of falling flat | • Automatisms | |||||||||
| Post-central gyrus | 1, 2, 3 | • Sensation of body parts in somatotopic order | • Impairment in naming task | |||||||||
| Superior parietal lobule | 7 | • Vestibular sensations (e.g., rocking and tilting to the side) | • Motor responses (e.g., head/eye movements) | |||||||||
| Dorsomedial parietal and precuneus | 5, 7m, 31 | • Feeling of levitation | • Motor responses | |||||||||
| Posterior cingulate cortex | 23 | • Contralateral hand paresthesia | • Speech arrest | |||||||||
| Inferior parietal lobule | 39, 40 | • Somatosensory sensations | • Motor intentions (urge to move), speech arrest | • Nausea | • Color anomia | |||||||
| Parietooccipital junction | • Seeing phosphenes or geometric shapes (triangle, diamond, or star) | |||||||||||
| Striate cortex | 17 | • Visual sensations (e.g., seeing simple patterns, white or black spots, stars, stardust or a blob of flashing light, colors or phosphenes) | ||||||||||
| Peristriate cortex | 18, 19 | • Visual sensations (e.g., seeing geometric shapes or moving particles) | ||||||||||
| Superior occipital gyrus | 7m/19 | • Visual sensations (e.g., seeing geometric shapes of triangles, diamonds, or stars), rocking sensations | ||||||||||
| Temporooccipital junction | 37, 39 | • Visual illusions (e.g., seeing movements slow down or things trembling) | ||||||||||
| Inferior temporal gyrus | 20, 37 | • Visual hallucinations (e.g., seeing geometric shapes, flashing lights) or seeing a face) | • Fear | • Alexia | ||||||||
| Parahippocampal region | 28, 34, 35, 36 | • Olfactory sensations | • Automatisms (e.g., chewing) | • Mirth | • Inability to count | |||||||
| Hippocampus | • Auditory hallucinations (e.g., hearing “water dripping”, “hammer and nail”, voices) | • Gestural or simple movements | • Tachycardia | • Urge to cry | • Déjà vu | |||||||
| Amygdala | • Sensations in hand and face | • Change in facial expression or voice tone | • Tachycardia | • Anger | • Déjà vu | |||||||
| Temporal pole | 38 | • Auditory hallucination (e.g., hearing human voices) | • Oroalimentary automatisms | • Change in blood pressure | • Fear | |||||||
| Superior temporal gyrus (anterior) | 22 | • Auditory hallucinations (e.g., hearing voices or music, often with a sensation of familiarity) | • Oroalimentary automatisms | • Fear | • Amnesia | |||||||
| Superior temporal gyrus (posterior) | 41, 42, 22 | • Auditory hallucinations (e.g., buzzing, music, or human voices) | • Speech arrest | • Impaired reading prose passage and recitation of lyrics or singing ability | ||||||||
| Middle temporal gyrus (anterior) | 20, 21 | • Auditory hallucinations (e.g., hearing music, or sounds that are familiar, different, or funny) | • Fear | • Impairments in naming | ||||||||
| Middle temporal gyrus (posterior) | 21 | • Auditory illusions (e.g., sounds getting distant or better) | ||||||||||
| Temporoparietal junction | • Speech arrest | • Delusion of somebody being close | • Anomia | |||||||||
| Basal ganglia | • Dysarthria | • Problems with word fluency | ||||||||||
| Thalamus | • Disruption in verbal/nonverbal memory processing | |||||||||||
| Internal capsule | • Crying uncontrollably without sensation of sadness | |||||||||||
| Subthalamic nucleus and neighboring nuclei (substania nigra and zona incerta) | • Crying and sobbing without feeling of sadness | • Heart rate increase, bilateral heat sensations, sweating | • Transient acute depression | • Slurred speech | ||||||||