The difference between electrical microstimulation and direct electrical stimulation – towards new opportunities for innovative functional brain mapping?

2016 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 231-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marion Vincent ◽  
Olivier Rossel ◽  
Mitsuhiro Hayashibe ◽  
Guillaume Herbet ◽  
Hugues Duffau ◽  
...  

AbstractBoth electrical microstimulation (EMS) and direct electrical stimulation (DES) of the brain are used to perform functional brain mapping. EMS is applied to animal fundamental neuroscience experiments, whereas DES is performed in the operating theatre on neurosurgery patients. The objective of the present review was to shed new light on electrical stimulation techniques in brain mapping by comparing EMS and DES. There is much controversy as to whether the use of DES during wide-awake surgery is the ‘gold standard’ for studying the brain function. As part of this debate, it is sometimes wrongly assumed that EMS and DES induce similar effects in the nervous tissues and have comparable behavioural consequences. In fact, the respective stimulation parameters in EMS and DES are clearly different. More surprisingly, there is no solid biophysical rationale for setting the stimulation parameters in EMS and DES; this may be due to historical, methodological and technical constraints that have limited the experimental protocols and prompted the use of empirical methods. In contrast, the gap between EMS and DES highlights the potential for new experimental paradigms in electrical stimulation for functional brain mapping. In view of this gap and recent technical developments in stimulator design, it may now be time to move towards alternative, innovative protocols based on the functional stimulation of peripheral nerves (for which a more solid theoretical grounding exists).

Author(s):  
George Zouridakis ◽  
Javier Diaz ◽  
Farhan Baluch

Functional brain mapping is a procedure that can be used to identify cortical areas that mediate sensorimotor and higher cognitive brain functions, such as language, attention, memory, and cognition. Clinically, it is currently used for preoperative surgical planning in patients suffering from intractable epilepsy and brain tumors, and may soon have significant applications in brain injury, stroke, dementia, and developmental disorders. Functional brain mapping is also a very powerful research tool in the area of cognitive neuroscience and, lately, in psychiatry. Recent technological advances in neuroimaging techniques, the development of large sensor arrays, the use of sophisticated computer systems and superior graphics, gradually make more apparent the relevance of this technique in providing answers to complex questions about the structural and functional connectivity of the brain, and the way it represents and processes information.


Neurosurgery ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 751-751
Author(s):  
Gorbach Alexander ◽  
Heiss John ◽  
Kufta Conrad ◽  
H. Oldfield Edward

2017 ◽  
Vol 276 ◽  
pp. 22-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaibao Sun ◽  
Rong Xue ◽  
Peng Zhang ◽  
Zhentao Zuo ◽  
Zhongwei Chen ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 20 (9) ◽  
pp. 623-628 ◽  
Author(s):  
Myeonggi Jeong ◽  
Manabu Tashiro ◽  
Laxsmi N. Singh ◽  
Keiichiro Yamaguchi ◽  
Etsuo Horikawa ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Madhur Parashar ◽  
Kasturi Saha ◽  
Sharba Bandyopadhyay

Abstract Sensing neuronal action potential associated magnetic fields (APMFs) is an emerging viable alternative of functional brain mapping. Measurement of APMFs of large axons of worms have been possible due to their size. In the mammalian brain, axon sizes, their numbers and routes, restricts using such functional imaging methods. With a segmented model of mammalian pyramidal neurons, we show that the APMF of intra-axonal currents in the axon hillock are two orders of magnitude larger than other neuronal locations. Expected 2D magnetic field maps of naturalistic spiking activity of a volume of neurons via widefield diamond-nitrogen-vacancy-center-magnetometry were simulated. A dictionary-based matching pursuit type algorithm applied to the data using the axon-hillock’s APMF signature allowed spatiotemporal reconstruction of action potentials in the volume of brain tissue at single cell resolution. Enhancement of APMF signals coupled with magnetometry advances thus can potentially replace current functional brain mapping techniques.


2008 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 222-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeff F. Dunn ◽  
Ursula I. Tuor ◽  
Jonn Kmech ◽  
Nicole A. Young ◽  
Amy K. Henderson ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document