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Improved alpha-beta power reduction via combined electrical and ultrasonic stimulation in a parkinsonian cortex-basal ganglia-thalamus computational model

Authors :
Thomas Tarnaud
Wout Joseph
Ruben Schoeters
Luc Martens
Emmeric Tanghe
Source :
JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objective. To investigate computationally the interaction of combined electrical and ultrasonic modulation of isolated neurons and of the parkinsonian cortex-basal ganglia-thalamus loop. Approach. Continuous-wave or pulsed electrical and ultrasonic neuromodulation is applied to isolated Otsuka plateau-potential generating subthalamic nucleus (STN) and Pospischil regular, fast and low-threshold spiking cortical cells in a temporally alternating or simultaneous manner. Similar combinations of electrical/ultrasonic waveforms are applied to a parkinsonian biophysical cortex-basal ganglia-thalamus neuronal network. Ultrasound-neuron interaction is modelled respectively for isolated neurons and the neuronal network with the NICE and SONIC implementations of the bilayer sonophore underlying mechanism. Reduction in α − β spectral energy is used as a proxy to express improvement in Parkinson’s disease by insonication and electrostimulation. Main results. Simultaneous electro-acoustic stimulation achieves a given level of neuronal activity at lower intensities compared to the separate stimulation modalities. Conversely, temporally alternating stimulation with 50 H z electrical and ultrasound pulses is capable of eliciting 100 H z STN firing rates. Furthermore, combination of ultrasound with hyperpolarizing currents can alter cortical cell relative spiking regimes. In the parkinsonian neuronal network, continuous-wave and pulsed ultrasound reduce pathological oscillations by different mechanisms. High-frequency pulsed separated electrical and ultrasonic deep brain stimulation (DBS) reduce pathological α − β power by entraining STN-neurons. In contrast, continuous-wave ultrasound reduces pathological oscillations by silencing the STN. Compared to the separated stimulation modalities, temporally simultaneous or alternating electro-acoustic stimulation can achieve higher reductions in α − β power for the same safety contraints on electrical/ultrasonic intensity. Significance. Focused ultrasound has the potential of becoming a non-invasive alternative of conventional DBS for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. Here, we elaborate on proposed benefits of combined electro-acoustic stimulation in terms of improved dynamic range, efficiency, spatial resolution, and neuronal selectivity.

Details

ISSN :
17412552 and 17412560
Volume :
18
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neural engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cce0015b03c5128577e8393a7c04960a