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Lifting the veil on the dynamics of neuronal activities evoked by transcranial magnetic stimulation.


ABSTRACT: Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a widely used non-invasive tool to study and modulate human brain functions. However, TMS-evoked activity of individual neurons has remained largely inaccessible due to the large TMS-induced electromagnetic fields. Here, we present a general method providing direct in vivo electrophysiological access to TMS-evoked neuronal activity 0.8-1 ms after TMS onset. We translated human single-pulse TMS to rodents and unveiled time-grained evoked activities of motor cortex layer V neurons that show high-frequency spiking within the first 6 ms depending on TMS-induced current orientation and a multiphasic spike-rhythm alternating between excitation and inhibition in the 6-300 ms epoch, all of which can be linked to various human TMS responses recorded at the level of spinal cord and muscles. The advance here facilitates a new level of insight into the TMS-brain interaction that is vital for developing this non-invasive tool to purposefully explore and effectively treat the human brain.

SUBMITTER: Li B 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5722613 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Lifting the veil on the dynamics of neuronal activities evoked by transcranial magnetic stimulation.

Li Bingshuo B   Virtanen Juha P JP   Oeltermann Axel A   Schwarz Cornelius C   Giese Martin A MA   Ziemann Ulf U   Benali Alia A  

eLife 20171122


Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a widely used non-invasive tool to study and modulate human brain functions. However, TMS-evoked activity of individual neurons has remained largely inaccessible due to the large TMS-induced electromagnetic fields. Here, we present a general method providing direct in vivo electrophysiological access to TMS-evoked neuronal activity 0.8-1 ms after TMS onset. We translated human single-pulse TMS to rodents and unveiled time-grained evoked activities of mo  ...[more]

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