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Pulsed ultrasound used to remote control brain circuits

Published on October 29, 2008 at 9:30 PM · 1 Comment

In a twist on nontraditional uses of ultrasound, a group of neuroscientists at Arizona State University has developed pulsed ultrasound techniques that can remotely stimulate brain circuit activity.

Their findings, published in the Oct. 29 issue of the journal Public Library of Science (PLoS) One, provide insights into how low-power ultrasound can be harnessed for the noninvasive neurostimulation of brain circuits and offers the potential for new treatments of brain disorders and disease.

While it might be hard to imagine the day where doctors could treat post traumatic stress disorders, traumatic brain injury and even Alzheimer's disease with the flip of a switch, most of us have in fact experienced some of ultrasound's numerous applications in our daily lives. For example, ultrasound has been used in fetal and other diagnostic medical imaging, ultrasonic teeth cleaning, physiotherapies, or surgical ablation. Ultrasound also provides a multitude of other non-medical uses, including pharmaceutical manufacturing, food processing, nondestructive materials testing, sonar, communications, oceanography and acoustic mapping.

"Studies of ultrasound and its interactions with biological tissues have a rich history dating back to the late 1920s," lead investigator William "Jamie" Tyler points out. "Several research groups have, for more than a half-century, demonstrated that ultrasound can produce changes in excitable tissues, such as nerve and/or muscle, but detailed studies in neurons at the cellular level have been lacking."

"We were able to unravel how ultrasound can stimulate the electrical activity of neurons by optically monitoring the activity of neuronal circuits, while we simultaneously propagated low-intensity, low-frequency ultrasound through brain tissues," says Tyler, assistant professor of neurobiology and bioimaging in the School of Life Sciences in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.

Led by Tyler, the ASU research group discovered that remotely delivered low intensity, low frequency ultrasound (LILFU) increased the activity of voltage-gated sodium and calcium channels in a manner sufficient to trigger action potentials and the release of neurotransmitter from synapses. Since these processes are fundamental to the transfer of information among neurons, the authors pose that this type of ultrasound provides a powerful new tool for modulating the activity of neural circuits.

"Many of the stimulation methods used by neuroscientists require the use and implantation of stimulating electrodes, requiring direct contact with nervous tissue or the introduction of exogenous proteins, such as those used for the light-activation of neurons," Tyler explains.

The search for new types of noninvasive neurostimulation methods led them to revisit ultrasound.

"We were quite surprised to find that ultrasound at power levels lower than those typically used in routine diagnostic medical imaging procedures could produce an increase in the activity of neurons while higher power levels produced very little effect on their activity," Tyler says.

Comments
  1. Lisa Perales Lisa Perales United States says:

    Arizona State University has always been a great leader in scientific investigation and discovery. . .and at the same time lead investigator William "Jamie" Tyler does immaculate work especially in areas pertaining to 'discoveries' relating to the abilities of ultrasound. However, announcing as something new that his team developed pulsed ultrasound techniques that can remotely stimulate brain circuit activity is not even to the level of being offensive.  It's just really silly.  But to his credit, Tyler does admit that there is not much new there in the announcement.  The Behavior Research Institute located in San Antonio successfully illustrated more than 5 years ago that ultrasound utilized non-invasively can influence brain cell structure to an astonishing degree. They even hold several patents on just how to do that very thing.  And in one more area of strange coincidence; that same Southwest Research facility has just recently announced the development of what is being referred to as  Total Immersion Memory Enhancement Mitotic Apparatus Procedure of which the acronym just happens to be. . .TIME MAP.   Did someone say 'Total Recall'.

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News-Medical.Net.



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