打开APP
userphoto
未登录

开通VIP,畅享免费电子书等14项超值服

开通VIP
超声干预可以在一小时内改变大脑功能Targeted ultrasound can change brain function | EurekAlert!

image: Ultrasound technology being used in the transcranial ultrasound stimulation lab at the University of Plymouth Brain Research and Imaging Centre view more 

Credit: University of Plymouth

这种超声技术称作经颅超声刺激(transcranial ultrasound stimulation,TUS),是一种新兴的非侵入性脑功能局部调节技术。它通过聚焦低强度的超声束来增加目标区域的压力,并改变此处神经元之间的交流方式。研究人员邀请24名健康成年人进行试验,分别刺激了他们的两个皮层深部区域。结果表明,在接收TUS的一小时内,大脑的皮质脊髓兴奋性增加,区域的功能连通性也有所增强。此外,后扣带皮层内抑制性神经递质GABA (γ -氨基丁酸)的浓度降低,但前扣带皮层的GABA水平基本不变,这表明TUS的效果可能受状态或位置影响。该研究验证了TUS在人类身上的使用效果,是超声波治疗精神疾病实现临床应用的重要一步,或有助于治疗抑郁症、成瘾症以及焦虑症等精神疾病。(UNIVERSITY OF PLYMOUTH)

超声干预可以在一小时内改变大脑功能

The targeted use of ultrasound technology can bring about significant changes in brain function that could pave the way towards treatment of conditions such as depression, addiction, or anxiety, a new study suggests.

Research by neuroscientists at the University of Plymouth explored the impacts of an emerging technique called transcranial ultrasound stimulation (TUS).

Typically, ultrasound examinations involve diffuse broad beams of ultrasound being used to create images while leaving the target tissue unaffected.

However, focusing the beams through TUS can increase the pressure in the target region and change the way neurons communicate with one another.

Writing in Nature Communications, the research team say a study involving 24 healthy adults showed that TUS can induce significant changes in GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) concentration within the brain’s posterior cingulate cortex in the hour following ultrasound treatment.

The study also showed that in the hour following the TUS treatment, the way the posterior cingulate cortex communicates with the rest of the brain was also profoundly altered.

However, the changes were not consistent across all areas with GABA levels not being altered in the anterior cingulate cortex, another cortical area equally related to psychiatric conditions but underlying different cognitive functions, particularly related to decision making, learning and attention regulation.

The research team – which also included experts from the University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust, University College London, Radboud University Nijmegen, and University of Oxford – say the study represents an important first step in the generation of clinical applications that could use ultrasound to treat mental health disorders.

They say the study provides evidence that TUS works in humans and that changes in the brain are reversible, although much more work will need to be done before it can be applied in a clinical setting.

They are already exploring whether TUS can be used to change the dopaminergic system, which could potentially alter how people make decisions, learn, and are motivated to engage in certain behaviours relevant to addiction.

Senior author Dr Elsa Fouragnan, Associate Professor of Neuroscience at the University of Plymouth and a UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellow, said: “One of the long-term aspirations of neuroscientists is to find ways to change activity in only certain parts of the brain while leaving the rest unchanged. If you are taking medication for depression, for example, the drug will impact the entire brain and clinicians have very limited control over where the drug goes and what it does. We already know that specific regions of the brain (and some of their connections) are dysfunctional in certain conditions but other regions can work perfectly well. This study provides us with the genuine potential to think about using ultrasound for more targeted interventions in people with a range of mental health conditions.”

Dr Siti Yaakub, a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University and the study’s lead author, added: “It was very interesting to see that when we targeted two different brain regions, it resulted in different changes in GABA concentration. This suggests that some TUS protocols work well for certain parts of the brain and not so well for others. Or maybe there is another mechanism at play, like the fact that the region needs to be in a certain state for the intervention to work, and that is something we clearly need to explore more in future work.”

The study was carried out at the University of Plymouth’s Brain Research and Imaging Centre, a state-of-the-art research facility opened in 2022 to help better understand brain activity and human behaviour.

It is the latest project involving the University to explore the impact of ultrasound on the human brain, with previous studies highlighting how ultrasound could be used to treat psychiatric disorders and change the decision-making process.



Journal

Nature Communications

Method of Research

Experimental study

Subject of Research

People

Article Title

Transcranial focused ultrasound-mediated neurochemical and functional connectivity changes in deep cortical regions in humans

Article Publication Date

1-Sep-2023

本站仅提供存储服务,所有内容均由用户发布,如发现有害或侵权内容,请点击举报
打开APP,阅读全文并永久保存 查看更多类似文章
猜你喜欢
类似文章
通往大脑的新途径:超声波成像
Science:5分钟初步分析你的大脑成熟水平-生物研究- 生物谷
西班牙电影《超声 Ultrasound》
Nature Reviews:一文读懂儿童功能性腹痛(综述) | 热心肠日报
副乳腺的超声检查及其分析_杨益虎
肌骨超声经典教材解读-6.4.2.6-臂丛神经的解剖与扫查
更多类似文章 >>
生活服务
热点新闻
分享 收藏 导长图 关注 下载文章
绑定账号成功
后续可登录账号畅享VIP特权!
如果VIP功能使用有故障,
可点击这里联系客服!

联系客服