Abstract

Respiratory related diseases associated with the neuronal control of breathing represent life-threatening issues and to date, no effective therapeutics are available to enhance the impaired function. The aim of this study was to determine whether a preclinical respiratory model could be used for further studies to develop a non-invasive therapeutic tool applied to rat diaphragmatic neuronal circuitry. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) was performed on adult male Sprague-Dawley rats using a human figure-of-eight coil. The largest diaphragmatic motor evoked potentials (MEPdia) were recorded when the center of the coil was positioned 6 mm caudal from Bregma, involving a stimulation of respiratory supraspinal pathways. Magnetic shielding of the coil with mu metal reduced magnetic field intensities and improved focality with increased motor threshold and lower amplitude recruitment curve. Moreover, transynaptic neuroanatomical tracing with pseudorabies virus (applied to the diaphragm) suggest that connections exist between the motor cortex, the periaqueductal grey cell regions, several brainstem neurons and spinal phrenic motoneurons (distributed in the C3-4 spinal cord). These results reveal the anatomical substrate through which supraspinal stimulation can convey descending action potential volleys to the spinal motoneurons (directly or indirectly). We conclude that MEPdia following a single pulse of TMS can be successfully recorded in the rat and may be used in the assessment of respiratory supraspinal plasticity. Supraspinal non-invasive stimulations aimed to neuromodulate respiratory circuitry will enable new avenues of research into neuroplasticity and the development of therapies for respiratory dysfunction associated with neural injury and disease (e.g. spinal cord injury, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis).

Highlights

  • There is a wide spread appreciation for developing new and powerful non-invasive strategies, enhancing neural activity and neuroplasticity with the therapeutic potential of transcranial magnetic stimulation

  • Recent clinical studies in healthy patients [16,17,18] have demonstrated that repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation and transcranial direct current stimulation could increase or decrease diaphragmatic MEP amplitude respectively in response to a Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) single pulse

  • Effect of magnetic shield on the magnetic field generated by the TMS coil The entire recorded magnetic field is located in the center of the coil without the magnetic shield, with two hot spots located in the middle of the two holes of the figure-of-eight

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Summary

Introduction

There is a wide spread appreciation for developing new and powerful non-invasive strategies, enhancing neural activity and neuroplasticity with the therapeutic potential of transcranial magnetic stimulation. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in humans has proven to be effective in the study of diaphragmatic motor evoked potential (MEP) [9,10,11,12,13] This provides an easy, non-invasive and painless clinical tool for studying respiratory supraspinal pathway excitability and plasticity in response to neuromodulation techniques in humans and animals [14,15]. Based on the results from these human studies, the aim of the present work was 1) to demonstrate the suitability of these stimulation techniques to the supraspinal respiratory pathways of adult rats and 2) to determine whether TMS represents a therapeutic strategy for enhancing diaphragmatic motor activity and neuroplasticity in preclinical models aimed to mimic various human respiratory insufficiencies

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