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Transcranial focused ultrasound modulates cortical and thalamic motor activity in awake sheep.

Authors: Kim HC, Lee W, Kunes J, Yoon K, Lee JE, Foley L, Kowsari K, Yoo SS

Transcranial application of pulsed low-intensity focused ultrasound (FUS) modulates the excitability of region-specific brain areas, and anesthetic confounders on brain activity warrant the evaluation of the technique in awake animals. We examined the neuromodulatory effects of FUS in unanesthetized sheep by developing a custom-fit headgear capable of reproducibly placing an acoustic focus on the unilateral motor cortex (M1) and corresponding thalamic area. The efferent responses to sonication, based on the acoustic parameters previously identified in anesthetized sheep, were measured using electromyography (EMG) from both hind limbs across three experimental conditions: on-target sonication, off-target sonication, and without sonication. Excitatory sonication yielded greater amplitude of EMG signals obtained from the hind limb contralateral to sonication than that from the ipsilateral limb. Spurious appearance of motion-related EMG signals limited the amount of analyzed data (~ 10% selection of acquired data) during excitatory sonication, and the averaged EMG response rates elicited by the M1 and thalamic stimulations were 7.5 ± 1.4% and 6.7 ± 1.5%, respectively. Suppressive sonication, while sheep walked on the treadmill, temporarily reduced the EMG amplitude from the limb contralateral to sonication. No significant change was found in the EMG amplitudes during the off-target sonication. Behavioral observation throughout the study and histological analysis showed no sign of brain tissue damage caused by the acoustic stimulation. Marginal response rates observed during excitatory sonication call for technical refinement to reduce motion artifacts during EMG acquisitions as well as acoustic aberration correction schemes to improve spatial accuracy of sonication. Yet, our results indicate that low-intensity FUS modulated the excitability of regional brain tissues reversibly and safely in awake sheep, supporting its potential in theragnostic applications.

Introduction

Purpose Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective To evaluate whether pulsed low-intensity focused ultrasound can safely and reproducibly modulate motor cortex and thalamic excitability in awake sheep using custom 3D-printed headgear and EMG measurements.
Animal model / Human subject sheep, Polypay, 24 weeks, female
Disease model healthy
MRI or image guidance method MRI-guided neuro-navigation: fMRI/MP‑RAGE anatomical registration using donut-shaped MR fiducial markers on the headgear, tattoo/scalp landmarks, and an in-house neuro-navigation system for planning/targeting
Targeted brain region(s) Motor Cortex
Route of administration Intramuscular (xylazine, tiletamine/zolazepam) and intravenous (additional Telazol doses; euthanasia with pentobarbital/phenytoin)

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Pulsed LIFU produced bimodal neuromodulation in awake sheep, with short sonications exciting and long sonications suppressing motor excitability.
Duration of biological effect 120 s
Safety-related matter The procedure was generally safe and reversible, though higher intensities caused transient behavioral disturbances like head shaking.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument GPS200-D40-FL57-MR FUS transducer
FUS Frequency 250 kHz
FUS Intensity 20.5 W/cm²
FUS Pressure not reported
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 0.5 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 200 ms
Focal Characteristics 30 mm
Treatment frequency Multiple

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