Mitigating the risk of overdosing TMS due to coil-to-scalp distance: An electric field modeling study
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Published:2024-07
Issue:4
Volume:17
Page:970-974
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ISSN:1935-861X
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Container-title:Brain Stimulation
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Brain Stimulation
Author:
Caulfield Kevin A.ORCID,
LaPorta Samantha M.,
Walton Rhiannon M.,
Collins Elisabeth V.,
Summers Philipp M.,
Cho Jennifer Y.,
Antonucci Michael U.,
Opitz Alexander,
George Mark S.,
McTeague Lisa M.
Reference17 articles.
1. How coil-cortex distance relates to age, motor threshold, and antidepressant response to repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation;Kozel;J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci,2000
2. Safety and benefits of distance-adjusted prefrontal transcranial magnetic stimulation in depressed patients 55-75 years of age: a pilot study;Nahas;Depress Anxiety,2004
3. An efficient and accurate new method for locating the F3 position for prefrontal TMS applications;Beam;Brain Stimul,2009
4. Simple metric for scaling motor threshold based on scalp-cortex distance: application to studies using transcranial magnetic stimulation;Stokes;J Neurophysiol,2005
5. Neuronavigation maximizes accuracy and precision in TMS positioning: evidence from 11,230 distance, angle, and electric field modeling measurements;Caulfield;Brain Stimul,2022