Varying Stimulation Parameters to Improve Cortical Plasticity Generated by VNS-tone Pairing
•VNS paired with tones drives substantial plasticity in primary auditory cortex.•VNS efficacy is influenced by parameters associated with amount and timing.•50 stimulations of 400-µA VNS delivered every 30 s drive robust plasticity.•50 stimulations of 400-µA VNS delivered every 180 s do not generate...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neuroscience 2018-09, Vol.388, p.239-247 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •VNS paired with tones drives substantial plasticity in primary auditory cortex.•VNS efficacy is influenced by parameters associated with amount and timing.•50 stimulations of 400-µA VNS delivered every 30 s drive robust plasticity.•50 stimulations of 400-µA VNS delivered every 180 s do not generate plasticity.•These interactions reveal a sixfold more efficient paradigm to achieve robust plasticity.
Pairing vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) with movements or sounds can direct robust plasticity in motor or auditory cortex, respectively. The degree of map plasticity is influenced by the intensity and pulse width of VNS, number of VNS-event pairings, and the interval between each pairing. It is likely that these parameters interact, influencing optimal implementation of VNS pairing protocols. We varied VNS intensity, number of stimulations, and inter-stimulation interval (ISI) to test for interactions among these parameters. Rats were implanted with a vagus nerve stimulating cuff and randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups to receive 20 days of VNS paired with a 9-kHz tone: (1) Fast VNS: 50 daily pairings of 400-µA VNS with a 30-s ISI; (2) Dispersed VNS: 50 daily pairings of 400-µA VNS with a 180-s ISI; and (3) Standard VNS: 300 daily pairings of 800-µA VNS with a 30-s ISI. Following 20 days of VNS-tone pairing, multi-unit recordings were conducted in primary auditory cortex (A1) and receptive field properties were analyzed. Increasing ISI (Dispersed VNS) did not lead to an enhancement of cortical plasticity. Reducing the current intensity and number of stimulations (Fast VNS) resulted in robust cortical plasticity, using 6 times fewer VNS pairings than the Standard protocol. These findings reveal an interaction between current intensity, stimulation number, and ISI and identify a novel VNS paradigm that is substantially more efficient than the previous standard paradigm. |
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ISSN: | 0306-4522 1873-7544 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2018.07.038 |