Abstract
Transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM) is a noninvasive neuromodulation method that facilitates the improvement of human cognition. However, limited information is available in the literature on the wavelength- and site-specific effects of prefrontal tPBM. Moreover, 2-channel broadband near-infrared spectroscopy (2-bbNIRS) is a new approach for quantifying infra-slow oscillations (ISO; 0.005 to 0.2Hz) of neurophysiological networks in the resting human brain in vivo. We aim to prove the hypothesis that the hemodynamic and metabolic activities of the resting prefrontal cortex are significantly modulated by tPBM and that the modulation is wavelength- and site-specific in different ISO bands. Noninvasive 8-min tPBM with an 800- or 850-nm laser or sham was delivered to either side of the forehead of 26 healthy young adults. A 2-bbNIRS unit was used to record prefrontal ISO activity 7min before and after tPBM/sham. The measured time series were analyzed in the frequency domain to determine the coherence of hemodynamic and metabolic activities at each of the three ISO frequency bands. Sham-controlled coherence values represent tPBM-induced effects on neurophysiological networks. Prefrontal tPBM by either wavelength and on either lateral side of the forehead (1)increased ipsilateral metabolic-hemodynamic coupling in the endogenic band and (2)desynchronized bilateral activity of metabolism in the neurogenic band and vascular smooth-muscle hemodynamics in the myogenic band. Site-specific effects of laser tPBM were also observed with significant enhancement of bilateral hemodynamic and metabolic connectivity by the right prefrontal 800-nm tPBM. Prefrontal tPBM can significantly modulate neurophysiological networks bilaterally and coupling unilaterally in the human prefrontal cortex. Such modulation effects are site- and wavelength-specific for each ISO band.
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