Evidence of transcranial direct current stimulation-generated electric fields at subthalamic level in human brain in vivo.

dc.contributor.author

Chhatbar, Pratik Y

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Kautz, Steven A

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Takacs, Istvan

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Rowland, Nathan C

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Revuelta, Gonzalo J

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George, Mark S

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Bikson, Marom

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Feng, Wuwei

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2019-08-01T13:27:17Z

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2019-08-01T13:27:17Z

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2018-07

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2019-08-01T13:27:17Z

dc.description.abstract

BACKGROUND:Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is a promising brain modulation technique for several disease conditions. With this technique, some portion of the current penetrates through the scalp to the cortex and modulates cortical excitability, but a recent human cadaver study questions the amount. This insufficient intracerebral penetration of currents may partially explain the inconsistent and mixed results in tDCS studies to date. Experimental validation of a transcranial alternating current stimulation-generated electric field (EF) in vivo has been performed on the cortical (using electrocorticography, ECoG, electrodes), subcortical (using stereo electroencephalography, SEEG, electrodes) and deeper thalamic/subthalamic levels (using DBS electrodes). However, tDCS-generated EF measurements have never been attempted. OBJECTIVE:We aimed to demonstrate that tDCS generates biologically relevant EF as deep as the subthalamic level in vivo. METHODS:Patients with movement disorders who have implanted deep brain stimulation (DBS) electrodes serve as a natural experimental model for thalamic/subthalamic recordings of tDCS-generated EF. We measured voltage changes from DBS electrodes and body resistance from tDCS electrodes in three subjects while applying direct current to the scalp at 2 mA and 4 mA over two tDCS montages. RESULTS:Voltage changes at the level of deep nuclei changed proportionally with the level of applied current and varied with different tDCS montages. CONCLUSIONS:Our findings suggest that scalp-applied tDCS generates biologically relevant EF. Incorporation of these experimental results may improve finite element analysis (FEA)-based models.

dc.identifier

S1935-861X(18)30089-5

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1935-861X

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1876-4754

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/19125

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eng

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Elsevier BV

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Brain stimulation

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10.1016/j.brs.2018.03.006

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Thalamus

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Humans

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Electromagnetic Fields

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Adult

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Female

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Male

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Brain Waves

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Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation

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Evidence of transcranial direct current stimulation-generated electric fields at subthalamic level in human brain in vivo.

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Chhatbar, Pratik Y|0000-0001-6436-8427

duke.contributor.orcid

Feng, Wuwei|0000-0001-6230-4905

pubs.begin-page

727

pubs.end-page

733

pubs.issue

4

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School of Medicine

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Duke

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Neurology, Stroke and Vascular Neurology

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Neurology

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Clinical Science Departments

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Published

pubs.volume

11

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