2019
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2019.00944
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Dynamic Functional Connectivity Within the Fronto-Limbic Network Induced by Intermittent Theta-Burst Stimulation: A Pilot Study

Abstract: PurposeThe utility of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) has been growing rapidly in both neurocognitive studies and clinical applications in decades. However, it remains unclear how the responses of the stimulated site and the site-related functional network to the external TMS manipulation dynamically change over time.MethodsA multi-session combining TMS-fMRI experiment was conducted to explore the spatiotemporal effects of TMS within the fronto-limbic network. Ten healthy volunteers were modulated by i… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…This is partly in line with the available literature as there is, to our knowledge, no report of prefrontal-stimulation induced modulation of hippocampal activity [but see ( Kim et al, 2018 ; Hermiller et al, 2020 ; Thakral et al, 2020 ) for parietal-stimulation-induced modulation of hippocampal activity] and only a few observations of activity changes in the striatum ( Ott et al, 2011 ; van Holstein et al, 2018 ). This stands in contrast with extensive evidence of prefrontal-stimulation-induced modulation of functional connectivity, in particular between the cortical target and deeper brain regions ( van der Werf et al, 2010 ; Bilek et al, 2013 ; Esslinger et al, 2014 ; Alkhasli et al, 2019 ; Shang et al, 2019 ; Tang et al, 2019 ). Together with these earlier observations, our results suggest that prefrontal stimulation can modulate connectivity patterns of the target and deeper brain regions without inducing changes in activity levels.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 58%
“…This is partly in line with the available literature as there is, to our knowledge, no report of prefrontal-stimulation induced modulation of hippocampal activity [but see ( Kim et al, 2018 ; Hermiller et al, 2020 ; Thakral et al, 2020 ) for parietal-stimulation-induced modulation of hippocampal activity] and only a few observations of activity changes in the striatum ( Ott et al, 2011 ; van Holstein et al, 2018 ). This stands in contrast with extensive evidence of prefrontal-stimulation-induced modulation of functional connectivity, in particular between the cortical target and deeper brain regions ( van der Werf et al, 2010 ; Bilek et al, 2013 ; Esslinger et al, 2014 ; Alkhasli et al, 2019 ; Shang et al, 2019 ; Tang et al, 2019 ). Together with these earlier observations, our results suggest that prefrontal stimulation can modulate connectivity patterns of the target and deeper brain regions without inducing changes in activity levels.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 58%
“…Previous research investigating the effect of DLPFC stimulation on brain activity at rest or during task-practice has reported significant effects on the brain responses in the stimulated area itself as well as in widespread networks including various cortical areas (motor, frontal, parietal, cingulate, temporal, insula), the cerebellum and deep regions including the striatum and the hippocampus (Esslinger et al, 2014;Gratton, Lee, Nomura, & D'Esposito, 2014;Hanlon et al, 2013Hanlon et al, , 2016Rounis et al, 2006;Shang et al, 2019;Tang et al, 2019;van der Werf et al, 2010;Xue et al, 2017). Our results indicate that facilitatory iTBS, as compared to inhibitory cTBS, applied prior to motor sequence learning, as compared to random, induced greater task-related activity in the cerebellum and the parietal cortex as well as in frontal areas nonoverlapping with the TBS target.…”
Section: Dlpfc Stimulation Altered Activity In Fronto-parietal-cerebementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only a few treatment options are available for suicidal ideation (e.g., lithium, Emission Computed Tomography) and are only partially effective (6). Individual target-transcranial magnetic stimulation (IT-TMS) represents an original tool that opens new avenues in the treatment of mental disorders, especially MDD (7). However, the clinical responses and neural networks of patients with MDD and SI are unclear.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%