Abstract
The effects of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on motor cortical excitability are highly variable between individuals. Inter-individual differences in the electric fields generated in the brain by tDCS might play a role in the variability. Here, we explored whether these fields are related to excitability changes following anodal tDCS of the primary motor cortex (M1). Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) were measured in 28 healthy subjects before and after 20 min sham or 1 mA anodal tDCS of right M1 in a double-blind crossover design. The electric fields were individually modelled based on magnetic resonance images. Statistical analysis indicated that the variability in the MEPs could be partly explained by the electric fields, subjects with the weakest and strongest fields tending to produce opposite changes in excitability. To explain the findings, we hypothesized that the likely locus of action was in the hand area of M1, and the effective electric field component was that in the direction normal to the cortical surface. Our results demonstrate that a large part of inter-individual variability in tDCS may be due to differences in the electric fields. If this is the case, electric field dosimetry could be useful for controlling the neuroplastic effects of tDCS.
Highlights
We studied the effect of 20 min 1 mA anodal tDCS on the excitability of the right M1, and modelled the EF in each individual subject
The initial findings suggested no significant differences between sham and real tDCS in the group-level MEPs
The responses to sham and real tDCS differed at the individual level
Summary
To study whether the RMT could be used instead of the EF to explain the changes in the normalized MEPs, we replaced En(→r0 ) with the RMT in the linear mixed effects model. The correlation coefficient between the RMT and the mean normalized MEP was r = 0.25 (P = 0.2), and the partial correlations without MEPbase and the EF were r = 0.20 (P = 0.3) and r = 0.23 (P = 0.2), respectively.
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