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Suppression of EEG visual-evoked potentials in rats through neuromodulatory focused ultrasound.

Authors: Kim H, Park MY, Lee SD, Lee W, Chiu A, Yoo SS

We investigated the use of pulsed low-intensity focused ultrasound (FUS) to suppress the visual neural response induced by light stimulation in rodents. FUS was administered transcranially to the rat visual cortex using different acoustic intensities and pulsing duty cycles. The visual-evoked potentials (VEPs) generated by an external strobe light stimulation were measured three times before, once during, and five times after the sonication. The VEP magnitude was suppressed during the sonication using a 5% duty cycle (pulse-repetition frequency of 100 Hz) and a spatial-peak pulse-average acoustic intensity of 3 W/cm; however, this suppressive effect was not present when a lower acoustic intensity and duty cycle were used. The application of a higher intensity and duty cycle resulted in a slight elevation in VEP magnitude, which suggested excitatory neuromodulation. Our findings demonstrate that the application of pulsed FUS to the region-specific brain area not only suppresses its excitability, but can also enhance the excitability depending on the acoustic intensity and the rate of energy deposition. This bimodal feature of FUS-mediated neuromodulation, which has been predicted by numerical models on neural membrane capacitance change by the external acoustic pressure waves, suggests its versatility for neurotherapeutic applications.

Introduction

Purpose Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective To test whether pulsed low-intensity focused ultrasound can modulate (suppress or enhance) light-evoked visual cortex responses in rats and how this depends on acoustic intensity and duty cycle.
Animal model / Human subject rat, Sprague-Dawley, 250–300 g, male
Disease model healthy
Targeted brain region(s) V1

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Low-intensity pulsed FUS (350 kHz) to rat V1 produced a duty-cycle-dependent modulation: 5% duty cycle suppressed light-evoked VEPs, while higher intensities/duty cycles induced slight excitatory effects.
Duration of biological effect not reported
Safety-related matter The neuromodulation was reversible and safe, with no histological evidence of tissue damage, microhemorrhage, or thermal injury at the tested intensities.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument single-element focused ultrasound transducer
FUS Frequency 350 kHz
FUS Intensity 3.0 W/cm²
FUS Pressure not reported
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 0.5 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 90 s
Focal Characteristics focal depth: none, focal length: none, aperture size: none
Treatment frequency single session

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