Water and brain function: effects of hydration status on neurostimulation with transcranial magnetic stimulation.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES Journal of neurophysiology Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-31 DOI:10.1152/jn.00143.2023
Sam S Critzer, Taylor J Bosch, Kelene A Fercho, Jamie L Scholl, Lee A Baugh
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Abstract

Neurostimulation/neurorecording are tools to study, diagnose, and treat neurological/psychiatric conditions. Both techniques depend on volume conduction between scalp and excitable brain tissue. Here, we examine how neurostimulation with transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is affected by hydration status, a physiological variable that can influence the volume of fluid spaces/cells, excitability, and cellular/global brain functioning. Normal healthy adult participants (32, 9 males) had common motor TMS measures taken in a repeated-measures design from dehydrated (12-h overnight fast/thirst) and rehydrated (identical dehydration protocol followed by rehydration with 1 L water in 1 h) testing days. The target region was left primary motor cortex hand area. Response at the target muscle was recorded with electromyography. Urinalysis confirmed hydration status. Motor hotspot shifted in half of participants. Motor threshold decreased in rehydration, indicating increased excitability. Even after redosing/relocalizing TMS to the new threshold/hotspot, rehydration still showed evidence of increased excitability: recruitment curve measures generally shifted upward and the glutamate-dependent paired-pulse protocol, short intracortical facilitation (SICF), was increased. Short intracortical inhibition (SICI), long intracortical inhibition (LICI), long intracortical facilitation (LICF), and cortical silent period (CSP) were relatively unaffected. The hydration perturbations were mild/subclinical based on the magnitude/speed and urinalysis. Motor TMS measures showed evidence of expected physiological changes of osmotic challenges. Rehydration showed signs of macroscopic and microscopic volume changes including decreased scalp-cortex distance (brain closer to stimulator) and astrocyte swelling-induced glutamate release. Hydration may be a source of variability affecting any techniques dependent on brain volumes/volume conduction. These concepts are important for researchers/clinicians using such techniques or dealing with the wide variety of disease processes involving water balance.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Hydration status can affect brain volumes and excitability, which should affect techniques dependent on electrical volume conduction, including neurostimulation/recording. We test the previously unknown effects of hydration on neurostimulation with TMS and briefly review relevant physiology of hydration. Rehydration showed lower motor threshold, shifted motor hotspot, and generally larger responses even after compensating for threshold/hotspot changes. This is important for clinical and research applications of neurostimulation/neurorecording and the many clinical disorders related to water balance.

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水与大脑功能--水合状态对经颅磁刺激神经的影响。
导言:神经刺激/神经记录是研究、诊断和治疗神经/精神疾病的工具。这两种技术都依赖于头皮和可兴奋脑组织之间的容量传导。水合状态是一个生理变量,可影响液体空间/细胞的体积、兴奋性和细胞/整体大脑功能。与脱水相比,我们预计补水会显示出宏观和微观体积变化的迹象,包括头皮-皮层距离的减少(大脑更靠近刺激器)和星形胶质细胞膨胀引起的谷氨酸释放:正常健康成年参与者(32 人,9 名男性)在脱水(12 小时快速过夜/口渴)和补水(相同的脱水方案,然后在 1 小时内用 1 升水补水)测试日采用重复测量设计进行了普通运动 TMS 测量。目标区域为左侧初级运动皮层手部区域。用肌电图记录目标肌肉的反应。尿液分析确认水合状态:结果:半数参与者的运动热点转移。补水后运动阈值降低,表明兴奋性增加。即使在对新阈值/热点重新施加/重新定位 TMS 后,补液仍显示出兴奋性增加的证据:招募曲线测量值普遍上移,SICF 增加。SICI、LICI、LICF 和 CSP 则相对不受影响。根据幅度/速度和尿液分析,水合作用的扰动是轻微的/亚临床的:讨论:运动 TMS 测量显示了渗透压挑战预期生理变化的证据。水合可能是影响取决于脑容量/体积传导的技术的变异性来源。这些概念对于使用此类技术或处理涉及水平衡的各种疾病过程的研究人员/临床医生非常重要。
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来源期刊
Journal of neurophysiology
Journal of neurophysiology 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
8.00%
发文量
255
审稿时长
2-3 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Neurophysiology publishes original articles on the function of the nervous system. All levels of function are included, from the membrane and cell to systems and behavior. Experimental approaches include molecular neurobiology, cell culture and slice preparations, membrane physiology, developmental neurobiology, functional neuroanatomy, neurochemistry, neuropharmacology, systems electrophysiology, imaging and mapping techniques, and behavioral analysis. Experimental preparations may be invertebrate or vertebrate species, including humans. Theoretical studies are acceptable if they are tied closely to the interpretation of experimental data and elucidate principles of broad interest.
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