Abstract

Mental disorders widely contribute to the modern global disease burden, creating a significant need for improvement of treatments. Scalp stimulation methods (such as scalp acupuncture and transcranial electrical stimulation) have shown promising results in relieving psychiatric symptoms. However, neuroimaging findings haven’t been well-integrated into scalp stimulation treatments. Identifying surface brain regions associated with mental disorders would expand target selection and the potential for these interventions as treatments for mental disorders. In this study, we performed large-scale meta-analyses separately on eight common mental disorders: attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, anxiety disorder, autism spectrum disorder, bipolar disorder, compulsive disorder, major depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and schizophrenia; utilizing modern neuroimaging literature to summarize disorder-associated surface brain regions, and proposed neuroimaging-based target protocols. We found that the medial frontal gyrus, the supplementary motor area, and the dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex are commonly involved in the pathophysiology of mental disorders. The target protocols we proposed may provide new brain targets for scalp stimulation in the treatment of mental disorders, and facilitate its clinical application.

Highlights

  • Mental disorders are a major component of the modern global disease burden

  • To help the readers understand the specific brain function of identified areas, we summarized the brain functions of each identified surface region associated with a corresponding mental disorder (Additional file 1: Figure S1)

  • Twenty-one clusters on the brain surface were identified from the uniformity test map of the meta-analysis (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The quality of the therapeutic outcomes of pharmacologic treatments for mental disorders is ambiguous due to their side effects, withdrawal symptoms, and risk of abuse. Scalp stimulation methods, i.e., applying transcranial stimulation on the scalp to modulate the function of corresponding brain areas to relive symptoms, have drawn increased attention of investigators. Scalp stimulation methods may include many different current treatments. Scalp acupuncture aims to modulate certain brain areas, thereby providing therapeutic benefits for a wide scope of diseases through the stimulation of specific scalp areas corresponding to certain cortical areas. Scalp acupuncture may be applied by manual stimulation or electrical stimulation (similar to transcranial alternating current stimulation [tACS]). Accumulating evidence has demonstrated the potential of scalp acupuncture in relieving symptoms of mental disorders [2, 3]

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