Increased theta-low gamma phase-amplitude coupling in resting electroencephalography after intermittent theta burst stimulation - 05/10/23

Abstract |
Objective |
Intermittent theta burst stimulation (iTBS) is based on the phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) pattern. We aimed to investigate the effect of iTBS on PAC in resting electroencephalography (EEG), which may provide insight into the underlying mechanism.
Methods |
Twenty-one healthy volunteers were recruited and received both active and sham neuroimaging-guided iTBS on two separate days, which was precisely delivered to the right superior temporal gyrus. On each experimental day, resting EEG was recorded before and after stimulation for each participant. PACs across electrodes and frequency bands were calculated and compared to investigate the effect of iTBS.
Results |
Theta (4–6 Hz) -low gamma (45–55 Hz) PAC over the stimulation site had a significant interaction effect, which increased after the active iTBS but did not differ after the sham iTBS. No significant interaction effect occurred in other cross-frequency couplings such as delta-low gamma, alpha-low gamma, delta-high gamma, theta-high gamma, or alpha-high gamma PAC in the region of interest.
Conclusion |
iTBS selectively modulated theta-low gamma PAC at the stimulation area, which exhibited both region- and frequency- specificity. This suggests that PAC may be a bridge connecting external neuromodulation to internal neuroplasticity.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Intermittent theta burst stimulation, Neuromodulation effect, Phase-amplitude coupling, Theta-low gamma PAC, Resting-state electro-encephalography
Plan
Vol 53 - N° 5
Article 102899- octobre 2023 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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