| Literature DB >> 26257632 |
Grégory Nordmann1, Valeriya Azorina1, Berthold Langguth2, Martin Schecklmann2.
Abstract
Motor cortex excitability can be measured by single- and paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) can induce neuroplastic effects in stimulated and in functionally connected cortical regions. Due to its ability to non-invasively modulate cortical activity, rTMS has been investigated for the treatment of various neurological and psychiatric disorders. However, such studies revealed a high variability of both clinical and neuronal effects induced by rTMS. In order to better elucidate this meta-plasticity, rTMS-induced changes in motor cortex excitability have been monitored in various studies in a pre-post stimulation design. Here, we give a literature review of studies investigating motor cortex excitability changes as a neuronal marker for rTMS effects over non-motor cortical areas. A systematic literature review in April 2014 resulted in 29 articles in which motor cortex excitability was assessed before and after rTMS over non-motor areas. The majority of the studies focused on the stimulation of one of three separate cortical areas: the prefrontal area (17 studies), the cerebellum (8 studies), or the temporal cortex (3 studies). One study assessed the effects of multi-site rTMS. Most studies investigated healthy controls but some also stimulated patients with neuropsychiatric conditions (e.g., affective disorders, tinnitus). Methods and findings of the identified studies were highly variable showing no clear systematic pattern of interaction of non-motor rTMS with measures of motor cortex excitability. Based on the available literature, the measurement of motor cortex excitability changes before and after non-motor rTMS has only limited value in the investigation of rTMS related meta-plasticity as a neuronal state or as a trait marker for neuropsychiatric diseases. Our results do not suggest that there are systematic alterations of cortical excitability changes during rTMS treatment, which calls into question the practice of re-adjusting the stimulation intensity according to the motor threshold over the course of the treatment.Entities:
Keywords: TMS; cross-modal; excitability; motor cortex; plasticity; transcranial magnetic stimulation
Year: 2015 PMID: 26257632 PMCID: PMC4508515 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Search strategy for identification of relevant publications.
| AND | TIT | rTMS OR repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation OR repetitive trans-cranial magnetic stimulation OR TMS OR transcranial magnetic stimulation OR trans-cranial magnetic stimulation OR theta-burst stimulation OR theta burst stimulation OR TBS OR paired associative stimulation OR PAS |
| TIT | Excitability OR “cort | |
| Result (21.04.2014): | ||
TIT, Title; ABS, Abstract; KW, Keyword. Understandable in the contex; for literature research
stands for a placeholder.
Overview of study parameters of prefrontal cortex rTMS studies investigating motor cortex excitability.
| Furukawa et al., | 10 HC | 1 | Bilateral DLPFC | 0.2 Hz, 120% RMT | 100 | ↑ CSP in the verum condition |
| Rollnik et al., | 18 HC | 1 | Left DLPFC | 5 Hz, 90% RMT | 60 | ↓ MEP in the verum group |
| Fierro et al., | 7 HC | 1 | Left DLPFC | 5 Hz, 90% RMT | 1800 | ↑ MEP, SICI after pain-induced decrease |
| Grunhaus et al., | 19 MD | 1 | Left DLPFC | 10 Hz, 90 % RMT | 1200 | ↑ MEP in both groups |
| Dolberg et al., | 46 MD | 20 | Left DLPFC | 10 Hz, 90% RMT | 1200 | ↔ RMT |
| Pallanti et al., | 28 MD | 15 | Right DLPFC | 1 Hz, 110% RMT | 420 | ↓ left RMT in responders |
| Nahas et al., | 11 BD | 10 | Left DLPFC | 5 Hz, 110% RMT | 1600 1600 | ↔ RMT |
| Chistyakov et al., | 11 MD | 10 | Left DLPFC | 3 Hz, 110% RMT | 450 | ↑ RMT in the 10 Hz group |
| Zarkowski et al., | 50 MD | 15 | Left DLPFC | 10 Hz, 120% RMT | 3000 | ↔ RMT in both conditions; identification of sub-groups with low and high variability of RMT |
| Pretalli et al., | 75 UD+BD | 10 | Left DLPFC | 10 Hz, 95% RMT | 1200 | ↔ RMT identification of sub-groups with ↑, ↔, ↓ |
| Croarkin et al., | 7 MD | 25 | Left DLPFC | 10 Hz, 120% RMT | 3000 | ↓ RMT |
| Spampinato et al., | 12 MD | 20 | Left DLPFC | 10 Hz, 120% RMT | 3000 | ↔ RMT, SICI, ICF, CSP |
| Shajahan et al., | 5 MD | 10 | Left DLPFC | 5 Hz, 80% RMT | 500 | ↑ RMT during first week, followed by ↓ for all study arms |
| Triggs et al., | 9 MD | 10 | Left DLPFC | 20 Hz, 80% RMT | 2000 | ↓ RMT |
| Bajbouj et al., | 30 MD | 10 | Left DLPFC | 20 Hz, 100% RMT | 2000 | ↑ SICI, CSP in responders |
| Mantovani et al., | 6 | 10 | Right DLPFC | 1 Hz, 100% RMT | 1200 | ↑ Right RMT |
| Ahmed et al., | 15 AD | 5 | Bilateral DLPFC | 20 Hz, 90% RMT | 2000 | ↔ RMT |
Studies were listed according to specific samples and within the groups to stimulation frequency.
BD, bipolar disorder; HC, healthy controls; MD, major depression; PAD, panic disorder; UD, unipolar disorder; DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; OC, occipital cortex; ↑, increases; ↔, no changes; ↓, decreases; CSP, cortical silent period; ICF, intracortical facilitation; MEP, motor evoked potential; RMT, resting motor threshold; SICI, short-interval intracortical inhibition; please note that increases in SICI means increases in inhibition and concomitantly a numeric decrease in the raw data.
Figure 1Positive findings of TMS-induced changes in non-motor areas with respect to motor cortex excitability. Please note that black, dark, and light gray represent different stimulation sites and white and black fonts represent healthy controls and patient groups, respectively. ↑, increases; ↔, no changes; ↓, decreases; CSP, cortical silent period; ICF, intracortical facilitation; MEP, motor evoked potential; RMT, resting motor threshold; SICI, short-interval intracortical inhibition; cTBS, continuous theta burst stimulation; iTBS, intermittent theta burst stimulation (8 s inter-burst interval); *22 out of 116 patients received combined frontal and temporal stimulation; **40% stimulator output instead of 100% RMT as stimulation intensity; ***90% active motor threshold over the inion instead of 80% RMT. Please note that increases in SICI means increases in inhibition and concomitantly a numeric decrease in the raw data.
Overview of study parameters of temporal cortex rTMS studies investigating motor cortex excitability.
| Eichhammer et al., | 17 HC | 5 | Left STG | 1 Hz, 110% RMT | 2000 | ↑ CSP in the verum group |
| Lee et al., | 21 HC | 5 | Right MTG | 1 Hz, 110% RMT | 1800 | ↑ MEP, ↓ CSP in the verum group |
| Langguth et al., | 10 TI | 5 | STG | 1 Hz, 110% RMT | 2000 | ↑ SICI, ICF, CSP associated with treatment response in the verum condition |
| Schecklmann et al., | 68 TI | 10 | AC | 1 Hz, 110% RMT | 2000 | ↑ RMT for all subjects |
Studies were listed according to specific samples and within the groups to stimulation frequency.
HC, healthy controls; TI, tinnitus; AC, auditory cortex; DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; MTG, middle temporal gyrus; STG, superior temporal gyrus; ↑, increases; ↔, no changes; ↓, decreases; CSP, cortical silent period; ICF, intracortical facilitation; MEP, motor evoked potential; RMT, resting motor threshold; SICI, short-interval intracortical inhibition; please note that increases in SICI means increases in inhibition and concomitantly a numeric decrease in the raw data.
Overview of study parameters of cerebellum rTMS studies investigating motor cortex excitability.
| Gerschlager et al., | 8 HC | 1 | Right CRB neck (control) | 1 Hz, 40% SO | 500 | ↑ MEP for CRB and neck stimulation |
| Oliveri et al., | 10 HC | 1 | Left CRB | 1 Hz, 90% RMT | 600 | ↑ MEP, ICF |
| Fierro et al., | 8 HC | 1 | Right CRB neck (control) | 1 Hz, 90% AMT at the inion | 900 | ↓ ICF, ↑ MEP |
| Langguth et al., | 10 HC | 1 | Medial CRB | 1 Hz, 120% RMT | 1000 | ↑ SICI, ↓ ICF, ↔ RMT after 1 Hz |
| Di Lorenzo et al., | 12 AD | 1 | Right CRB | cTBS | 600 | ↔ SICI, ICF |
| Koch et al., | 10/12 HC | 1 | Left CRB | iTBS, cTBS | 600 | ↓ MEP, SICI after cTBS |
| Li Voti et al., | 12 HC | 1 | Right CRB | cTBS | 600 | ↓ MEP |
| Brusa et al., | 10 PSP | 10 | Left and right CRB | iTBS | 1200 | ↔ RMT, SICI, ICF |
Studies were listed according to specific samples and within the groups to stimulation frequency.
AD, Alzheimer's disease; HC, healthy controls; PSP, Progressive Supranuclear Palsy; CRB, cerebellum; SO: stimulator output; ↑, increases; ↔, no changes; ↓, decreases; CSP, cortical silent period; ICF, intracortical facilitation; MEP, motor evoked potential; RMT, resting motor threshold; SICI, short-interval intracortical inhibition; cTBS, continuous theta burst stimulation; iTBS, intermittent theta burst stimulation (8s inter-burst interval); please note that increases in SICI means increases in inhibition and concomitantly a numeric decrease in the raw data.
Number of different measures of motor cortex excitability with increases, no changes (null findings), and decreases with respect to the different stimulation sites.
| Frontal | ↑ | 3 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| ↔ | 9 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1 | |
| ↓ | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | |
| Temporal | ↑ | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| ↔ | 2 | 0 | 2 | 3 | 1 | |
| ↓ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | |
| Cerebellum | ↑ | 0 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| ↔ | 4 | 0 | 4 | 3 | 1 | |
| ↓ | 0 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 0 | |
| Frontal + temporal + cerebellum (sum) | ↑ | 3 | 7 | 4 | 3 | 5 |
| ↔ | 15 | 1 | 7 | 9 | 3 | |
| ↓ | 4 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
Please note that numbers are not consistent with numbers of studies as several studies used several stimulation protocols.
↑, increases; ↔, no changes; ↓, decreases over the course of the repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.
Combinations of studies with similar study designs.
| Shajahan et al., | 15 | 10 | 5, 10, 20 | 80 | 500 | ↑ |
| Chistyakov et al., | 18 | 10 | 10 | 100 | 500 | ↑ |
| Pretalli et al., | 75 | 10 | 10 | 95 | 1200 | ↔ |
| Dolberg et al., | 46 | 20 | 10 | 90 | 1200 | ↔ |
| Bajbouj et al., | 30 | 10 | 20 | 100 | 2000 | ↔ |
| Triggs et al., | 9 | 10 | 20 | 80 | 2000 | ↓ |
| Zarkowski et al., | 50 | 15 | 10 | 120 | 3000 | ↔ |
| Croarkin et al., | 7 | 25 | 10 | 120 | 3000 | ↓ |
| Spampinato et al., | 12 | 20 | 10 | 120 | 3000 | ↔ |
All studies stimulated the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in only patients with affective disorders. Variable of interest was the resting motor threshold.
RMT, resting motor threshold; ↑, increases; ↔, no changes; ↓, decreases in RMT over the course of the repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.