Abstract

Quadri-pulse stimulation (QPS), a type of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), can induce a considerable aftereffect on cortical synapses. Human experiments have shown that the type of effect on synaptic efficiency (in terms of potentiation or depression) depends on the time interval between pulses. The maturation of biophysically-based models, which describe the physiological properties of plasticity mathematically, offers a beneficial framework to explore induced plasticity for new stimulation protocols. To model the QPS paradigm, a phenomenological model based on the knowledge of spike timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) mechanisms of synaptic plasticity was utilized where the cortex builds upon the platform of neuronal population modeling. Induced cortical plasticity was modeled for both conventional monophasic pulses and unidirectional pulses generated by the cTMS device, in a total of 117 different scenarios. For the conventional monophasic stimuli, the results of the predictive model broadly follow what is typically seen in human experiments. Unidirectional pulses can produce a similar range of plasticity. Additionally, changing the pulse width had a considerable effect on the plasticity (approximately 20% increase). As the width of the positive phase increases, the size of the potentiation will also increase. The proposed model can generate predictions to guide future plasticity experiments. Estimating the plasticity and optimizing the rTMS protocols might effectively improve the safety implications of TMS experiments by reducing the number of delivered pulses to participants. Finding the optimal stimulation protocol with the maximum potentiation/depression can lead to the design of a new TMS pulse generator device with targeted hardware and control algorithms.

Highlights

  • Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive method for modulating central nervous system functions

  • To demonstrate the ability of the spike timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) and the neural field model to predict the aftereffect of the Quadri-pulse stimulation (QPS) on the plasticity, the described model was run with the conventional monophasic QPS protocols [11]

  • As far as we have studied, that research is the most comprehensive database related to the QPS protocol

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Summary

Introduction

Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive method for modulating central nervous system functions. Brief stimuli of an electromagnetic field are applied to the neural tissues with current-carrying treatment coils. The fast-changing field induces electrical currents within the neurons and modulates cell activity. Certain paradigms for magnetic stimulation can increase or decrease cortical excitability even after the end of stimulation which is called plasticity. The induced plasticity generally depends on the time interval between pulses, the stimulation intensity, the session duration. Certain patterns can strengthen or weaken synapses between neurons, a process called long-term potentiation (LTP) and depression (LTD), respectively. These effects generally outlast the period of magnetic stimulation and the aftereffects are highly dependent on the stimulation characteristics

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