| Literature DB >> 34973457 |
Arianna Menardi1, Simone Rossi2, Giacomo Koch3, Harald Hampel4, Andrea Vergallo4, Michael A Nitsche5, Yaakov Stern6, Barbara Borroni7, Stefano F Cappa8, Maria Cotelli9, Giulio Ruffini10, Georges El-Fakhri11, Paolo M Rossini12, Brad Dickerson13, Andrea Antal14, Claudio Babiloni15, Jean-Pascal Lefaucheur16, Bruno Dubois17, Gustavo Deco18, Ulf Ziemann19, Alvaro Pascual-Leone20, Emiliano Santarnecchi21.
Abstract
Noninvasive brain stimulation techniques (NiBS) have gathered substantial interest in the study of dementia, considered their possible role in help defining diagnostic biomarkers of altered neural activity for early disease detection and monitoring of its pathophysiological course, as well as for their therapeutic potential of boosting residual cognitive functions. Nevertheless, current approaches suffer from some limitations. In this study, we review and discuss experimental NiBS applications that might help improve the efficacy of future NiBS uses in Alzheimer's Disease (AD), including perturbation-based biomarkers for early diagnosis and disease tracking, solutions to enhance synchronization of oscillatory electroencephalographic activity across brain networks, enhancement of sleep-related memory consolidation, image-guided stimulation for connectome control, protocols targeting interneuron pathology and protein clearance, and finally hybrid-brain models for in-silico modeling of AD pathology and personalized target selection. The present work aims to stress the importance of multidisciplinary, translational, model-driven interventions for precision medicine approaches in AD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Noninvasive brain stimulation; Precision medicine; Transcranial electrical stimulation; Transcranial magnetic stimulation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34973457 PMCID: PMC8858588 DOI: 10.1016/j.arr.2021.101555
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ageing Res Rev ISSN: 1568-1637 Impact factor: 11.788