Pitt Shield

Long term study of motivational and cognitive effects of low-intensity focused ultrasound neuromodulation in the dorsal striatum of nonhuman primates.

Authors: Munoz F, Meaney A, Gross A, Liu K, Pouliopoulos AN, Liu D, Konofagou EE, Ferrera VP

Noninvasive brain stimulation using transcranial focused ultrasound (FUS) has many potential applications as a research and clinical tool, including incorporation into neural prosthetics for cognitive rehabilitation. To develop this technology, it is necessary to evaluate the safety and efficacy of FUS neuromodulation for specific brain targets and cognitive functions. It is also important to test whether repeated long-term application of FUS to deep brain targets improves or degrades behavioral and cognitive function. To this end, we investigated the effects of FUS in the dorsal striatum of nonhuman primates (NHP) performing a visual-motor decision-making task for small or large rewards. Over the course of 2 years, we performed 129 and 147 FUS applications, respectively, in two NHP. FUS (0.5 MHz @ 0.2-0.8 MPa) was applied to the putamen and caudate in both hemispheres to evaluate the effects on movement accuracy, motivation, decision accuracy, and response time. Sonicating the caudate or the putamen unilaterally resulted in modest but statistically significant improvements in motivation and decision accuracy, but at the cost of slower reaction times. The effects were dose (i.e., FUS pressure) and reward dependent. There was no effect on reaching accuracy, nor was there long-term behavioral impairment or neurological trauma evident on T1-weighted, T2-weighted, or susceptibility-weighted MRI scans. Sonication also resulted in significant changes in resting state functional connectivity between the caudate and multiple cortical regions. The results indicate that applying FUS to the dorsal striatum can positively impact the motivational and cognitive aspects of decision making. The capability of FUS to improve motivation and cognition in NHPs points to its therapeutic potential in treating a wide variety of human neural diseases, and warrants further development as a novel technique for non-invasive deep brain stimulation.

Introduction

Purpose Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective To evaluate the safety and efficacy of repeated transcranial focused ultrasound applied to the dorsal striatum in nonhuman primates by measuring its effects on motivation, decision accuracy, reaction time, movement accuracy, and brain connectivity during a visual-motor decision-making task.
Animal model / Human subject Nonhuman primates (NHP); strain not specified; age not specified; sex male
MRI or image guidance method MRI-guided neuronavigation
Targeted brain region(s) Striatum

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Unilateral transcranial focused ultrasound of the caudate or putamen modestly improved motivation and decision accuracy, slowed reaction times, changed functional connectivity, and cause no motor deficits or MRI-detectable injury, and the effects were dose and reward -dependent
Safety-related matter No long term behavioral impairment or neurological trauma observed following repeated sonications. No evidence for tissue damage following post treatment

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument ultrasound transducer (Sonic Concepts H-107MR)
FUS Frequency 0.5 MHz
FUS Intensity 0.5-7.8 W/cm2 (ISPPA); 10.1-156.7 mW/cm2 (ISPTA)
FUS Pressure 0.2 - 0.8 MPa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 120 seconds (2 minutes)
Focal Characteristics Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency Multiple sessions

We are open to feedback. If you see a mistake or have a suggestion, please contact us.

← Back to Search