| Literature DB >> 34912017 |
Conan Chen1, Yixiang Mao2, Maryam Falahpour2, Kelly H MacNiven3,4, Gary Heit4,5, Vivek Sharma4, Konstantinos Alataris4, Thomas T Liu6.
Abstract
Transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) has shown promise as a non-invasive alternative to vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) with implantable devices, which has been used to treat drug-resistant epilepsy and treatment-resistant depression. Prior work has used functional MRI to investigate the brain response to taVNS, and more recent work has also demonstrated potential therapeutic effects of high-frequency sub-threshold taVNS in rheumatoid arthritis. However, no studies to date have measured the effects of high-frequency sub-threshold taVNS on cerebral blood flow (CBF). The objective of this study was to determine whether high-frequency (20 kHz) sub-threshold taVNS induces significant changes in CBF, a promising metric for the assessment of the sustained effects of taVNS. Arterial spin labeling (ASL) MRI scans were performed on 20 healthy subjects in a single-blind placebo-controlled repeated measures experimental design. The ASL scans were performed before and after 15 min of either sub-threshold taVNS treatment or a sham control. taVNS induced significant changes in CBF in the superior posterior cerebellum that were largely localized to bilateral Crus I and Crus II. Post hoc analyses showed that the changes were driven by a treatment-related decrease in CBF. Fifteen minutes of high-frequency sub-threshold taVNS can induce sustained CBF decreases in the bilateral posterior cerebellum in a cohort of healthy subjects. This study lays the foundation for future studies in clinical populations, and also supports the use of ASL measures of CBF for the assessment of the sustained effects of taVNS.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34912017 PMCID: PMC8674256 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-03401-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Diagram of experimental design. Each subject undergoes a control session and a treatment session. Each session consists of pre scans, a stimulation (sham for control session) section, and post scans.
Figure 2Maps showing clusters of voxels with significant effects, FWE-corrected at p < 0.05 with voxelwise threshold p < 0.01. Contrast-dependent cluster size thresholds based on permutation testing are indicated below. Surviving voxels are color-coded by their t-statistic value and overlaid on anatomical images, with the same slices shown for all three contrasts. No significant clusters were observed in any of the other slices. (a) For the main (Post–Pre)treatment − (Post–Pre)control contrast , one cluster with 71 voxels survived with a cluster size threshold of 22 voxels. (b) For the Postcontrol – Precontrol contrast, no clusters survived with a cluster size threshold of 35 voxels. (c) For the Posttreatment – Pretreatment contrast, two clusters survived with a cluster size threshold of 51 voxels.
Figure 3Post-hoc analysis with mean per-subject CBF values from the cluster shown in Fig. 2a. The Pre and Post values from the control and treatment sessions are shown in the leftmost and center pairs, respectively. The (Post–Pre) CBF differences from the control and treatments sessions are shown in the rightmost pair. There was a significant treatment-related decrease in CBF (p < 0.001, −15.90%) alongside a weak, statistically insignificant increase in the control session (p = 0.19, + 4.02%), resulting in a significant main effect (p < 0.001).
Figure 4The main effect for any significant differences in effect between the subjects randomized to A: Control then Treatment vs B: Treatment then Control. The plot below shows the main contrast values of (Post–Pre)treatment − (Post–Pre)control within the main contrast cluster reported in Fig. 3. On the left are subjects randomized to group A; on the right are subjects randomized to group B. A two-sided two-sample t-test was performed between the two groups, indicating no significant difference in main effect (p = 0.54) between the two session orders.