Medical Researchers at
the Stanford University School of Medicine have determined the amount of human
brain tissue that is excited by a given dose of electrical stimulation.
“We have, for the
first time in humans, established a dose-response curve that applies to
electrical stimulation rather than to drugs,” said Josef Parvizi, MD, PhD,
associate professor of neurology and neurological sciences.
The findings,
described in a study published online Dec. 8 in Neuron, may guide the
therapeutic application of electrical brain stimulation via surgically
implanted, current-emitting devices.
Parvizi is the senior Researcher
of the study. The Lead Researcher is the former Stanford postdoctoral scholar Jonathan
Winawer, PhD, He is now an associate professor of Psychology at New York University.
Devices delivering
defined therapeutic doses of electricity to structures within the brain are now
in widespread commercial use for countering the tremors of Parkinson’s disease
and controlling seizures in epilepsy patients, and are approved for some
patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder. Similar devices are undergoing
clinical testing for other conditions, including depression and Tourette’s
syndrome.
“We often try to
correct a problem occurring in some tiny part of the brain’s complicated
circuitry by administering a drug,” said Parvizi. “However, instead of reaching
the cells you want to target, much or most of the drug may wind up in the skin,
bone, muscle, liver and elsewhere, not to mention brain cells you don’t want to
target.” That can cause all kinds of side effects.
‘Immense potential’
“Electrical brain
stimulation, targeting only a specific malfunctioning brain circuit, has
immense potential to change medical practice,” Parvizi said. “But figuring out
just how much current will be effective without recruiting unwanted brain
circuitry and inducing side effects has been largely guesswork.”
To have a more
accurate picture, the new research focused on part of the brain’s surface
called the primary visual cortex, one of the most well-studied regions of the human
brain. Located at the posterior part of the brain on the facing inner surfaces
of that organ’s two hemispheres, the primary visual cortex is the first docking
station for visual information from the retina.
Each nerve cell in the
primary visual cortex receives its information from a fixed location in the
retina and responds to an object observed at a given position in a person’s
visual field. The precision with which this correspondence has already been
mapped out makes the primary visual cortex an ideal place to examine just how
far the effects of a given electrical input propagate along the brain’s
surface.
Parvizi, who directs
Stanford’s Human Intracranial Cognitive Electrophysiology Program , was taking
care of four adult patients under his evaluation at Stanford Health Care to
determine the point of origin of their recurring, drug-refractory epileptic
seizures. In this procedure, a portion of the skull is temporarily removed and
a grid of electrodes is placed on the brain’s surface in order to record
seizure activity and pinpoint the spot in the brain where it begins.
Each of these four
patients’ primary visual cortex, while perfectly healthy, was partially covered
by the electrode grids.
Mapping phosphenes
Investigators showed
them geometric forms moving across a computer screen while they stared at the
center of the screen. Using brain-imaging techniques, the researchers mapped
which areas of the participants’ primary visual cortex these displays
activated.
Once electrode grids
were in place, the team used them to stimulate and to record activity in the
participants’ primary visual cortex. After each stimulation, they asked the
participants to chart the location and size of the hallucinatory phenomena, or
phosphenes, they experienced in their visual field in response to electrical
stimulation.
Electrical brain
stimulation, targeting only a specific malfunctioning brain circuit, has
immense potential to change medical practice.”
A phosphene is a
visual sensation in the absence of light. Some phosphenes look like a
flickering, fractured formation composed of small zigzagging lines of color
dancing at a specific location in the field of vision. (For people prone to
migraines, such apparitions often herald the onset of a painful headache.)
Others may just be a burst of light or color. (People often “see” phosphenes
when they rub their closed eyes.) It’s long been known that activating the
primary visual cortex by direct electrical stimulation can produce phosphenes,
which persist for the duration of the stimulation and then vanish.
The investigators,
always taking care to adhere to strict safety limits, pulsed electrical current
from one or another electrode at varying frequencies, pulse widths, amplitudes
and durations while the participants stared at the center of the computer
screen. After each instance of stimulation, they were asked to draw on the
computer screen, using its trackpad, the outline of the phosphene they saw in
its perceived location. Then, using the imaging-derived maps of the
individuals’ primary visual cortexes they’d constructed earlier, the
researchers were able to connect points on the observed phosphenes to
corresponding points on participants’ primary visual cortex, and to infer from
phosphenes’ sizes and locations just how much brain-surface area in that brain
region had been excited by each electrode-delivered stimulation.
“The resulting
dose-response relationship can be used now in clinical trials of electrical
brain stimulation,” Parvizi said.
Scientists have tried
to establish this relationship in rodents, said Winawer. “But you can’t easily
extrapolate from rodent studies, both because our brains are quite different
from theirs and because the recording and stimulating instruments used in
rodent experiments are 1,000-fold different from those used in humans.”
Nor have connections
between the physiologically measureable outcome and perceptual outcome been
previously mapped to any extent. (Animals can’t report what they see.)
“Notably, we observed
a clear correspondence between the amount of electricity applied and the size
and intensity of the ensuing visual phenomena subjects reported experiencing,”
said Parvizi, who has long been fascinated by the question of how manipulating
the brain’s strictly material components alters subjective consciousness.
How well the
dose-response relationship as measured at the cortical surface holds up in
deep-brain structures remains to be further tested, he added.
The study was funded
by grants from the
National Eye Institute
(EWY022116), National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
(R01NS078396), the National Institute of Mental Health (1RO1MH109954) and
National Science Foundation .
Stanford’s Department
of Neurology and Neurological Sciences also supported the work.
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