Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurology University Medical Centre Ljubljana Ljubljana Slovenia
2. Medical Faculty University of Ljubljana Ljubljana Slovenia
3. Faculty of Computer and Information Science and Department of Psychology University of Ljubljana Ljubljana Slovenia
Abstract
AbstractNeurophysiological evidence that transcutaneous auricular vagal nerve stimulation (taVNS) affects neuronal signalling at the cortical level is sparse. We used transcranial magnetic stimulation to assess the effect of taVNS on the excitability of intracortical GABAergic and cholinergic circuits.In this within‐subject, double‐blind study on 30 healthy participants, we used TMS paradigms to assess the effect of a single session of taVNS at 100 Hz and sham earlobe VNS (sVNS) on short‐interval intracortical inhibition (SICI) curve and short‐latency afferent inhibition (SAI). Control experiment was performed on additional 15 participants using the same experimental settings, but delivering no stimulation (xVNS). Bayesian statistics were used to assess the differences, producing % values that reflect the certainty that the values of interest were decreased during or after stimulation compared with baseline. taVNS increased SICI (96.3%), whereas sVNS decreased SICI (1.2%). SAI was not affected by taVNS, although it was decreased during sVNS (1.34% and 9.1%, for interstimulus intervals 20 and 24 ms, respectively). The changes in TMS parameters detected during sVNS were present in the same direction in the control experiment with no stimulation.Our study provides evidence that taVNS increases the activity of cortical GABAAergic system, leaving cortical cholinergic circuits unaffected. Changes in intracortical cortical excitability during sVNS, which were also observed in the control experiment with no stimulation were likely the effect of expectation related to participation in an interventional study.
Funder
Javna Agencija za Raziskovalno Dejavnost RS
Cited by
13 articles.
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