| Literature DB >> 35046771 |
Ru Ma1, Xinzhao Xia2, Wei Zhang1, Zhuo Lu2, Qianying Wu1,3, Jiangtian Cui2,4, Hongwen Song1, Chuan Fan2, Xueli Chen1, Rujing Zha1, Junjie Wei5, Gong-Jun Ji5, Xiaoxiao Wang2, Bensheng Qiu2, Xiaochu Zhang1,2,6,7.
Abstract
Background: Temporal interference (TI) stimulation is a new technique of non-invasive brain stimulation. Envelope-modulated waveforms with two high-frequency carriers can activate neurons in target brain regions without stimulating the overlying cortex, which has been validated in mouse brains. However, whether TI stimulation can work on the human brain has not been elucidated. Objective: To assess the effectiveness of the envelope-modulated waveform of TI stimulation on the human primary motor cortex (M1).Entities:
Keywords: brain oscillation; motor cortex excitability; motor function; non-invasive brain stimulation; temporal interference stimulation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35046771 PMCID: PMC8761631 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.800436
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1Experimental design and motor tasks. (A) The experimental procedures. (B) Motor task implemented in our experiments. (C) RRTT. (D) SRTT. In R blocks, there were three 12-item (bnmvnbmnvbvm, nvnmbvmnbmvb, mvbmnbnvmbvn) sequences with comparable difficulty for each experimental session in a counterbalanced way.
FIGURE 2Montage of TI stimulation and the generated electric field on a human head model. (A) The stimulation electrodes were located 30 mm away from the TMS hotspot, along the axis of the Fpz-Oz and T3-T4 in the EEG international 10–20 system. (B) The distribution of the envelope amplitude along the chosen direction (pointing posterolaterally at a 45° from the mid-line) in the brain. (C) An actual scene of electrode placement. The electrodes in red and green constitute channel1 and the electrodes in black and white constitute channel2. The ground electrode (brown) located on the mastoid behind the participant’s left ear to avoid current accumulations due to safety considerations.
FIGURE 3Results of the RRTT experiment. (A) The mean RT of the 70 Hz condition was significantly smaller than that of the sham condition. (B) Significant increases in the IO slope after TI stimulation were found only in the 70 Hz condition. Error bars represent SEM; *significant at pcorrected < 0.05.
FIGURE 4Results of the SRTT experiment. (A) Implicit motor learning during FIL in SRTT. A significant RT reduction was only obtained in the 20 Hz condition. (B) Marginally significant increases in MEP amplitude after TI stimulation at 20 Hz. (C) RT reduction of FIL and the MEP increase in the 20 Hz condition was significantly positively correlated in the 20 Hz condition. Error bars represent SEM; + marginally significant at 0.05 < pcorrected < 0.1, *significant at pcorrected < 0.05.
Discomforts in RRTT.
| Sensations | Active sessions (N/42) | Sham sessions (N/21) |
| None | 41 | 20 |
| Fatigue and Vertigo | 0 | 1 |
| Headache | 1 | 0 |
Discomforts in SRTT.
| Sensations | Active sessions (N/58) | Sham sessions (N/29) |
| None | 55 | 28 |
| Fatigue | 3 | 1 |