4.6 Article

Bibliometric analysis of publication trends and research hotspots in vagus nerve stimulation: A 20-year panorama

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.1045763

Keywords

vagus nerve stimulation; neuromodulation; neurophysiology; bibliometrics; visualization

Funding

  1. Key plan of Zhejiang Province Traditional Chinese Medicine Prevention and Treatment of Major Diseases of the Health and Family Planning Commission of Zhejiang Province
  2. [2018ZY008]

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This study conducted a bibliometric analysis to identify publication trends and research hotspots in VNS research over a 20-year period. The results revealed the top countries, institutions, journals, and authors in the field. Evolving research hotspots were also identified, including the effectiveness and mechanism of VNS in epilepsy, its role as an anti-inflammatory regulator, its application in psychiatric disorders, and its neuromodulation effect in headache management. This study provides valuable insights to guide future research directions in VNS.
Background: As a promising neuromodulation technique, vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) has been utilized to treat diverse diseases and the number of VNS studies has grown prosperously. Nonetheless, publication trends and research hotspots in this field remain unknown. This study aimed to perform a bibliometric analysis to systematically identify publication trends and research hotspots in VNS research within a 20-year panorama. Methods: The Web of Science Core Collection (WoSCC) database was retrieved to screen eligible VNS-related publications from 2002 to 2021. The online analytic tool of the WoSCC database was used to analyze various bibliometric parameters, such as the number of annual publications, the output of countries/regions, journals, total citations, citations per publication, and the Hirsch index. Bibliometrics () and CiteSpace (version 5.6.R3) were used to identify research trends and hotspots. Results: A total of 7,283 publications were included for analysis. The annual number of publications increased stably but it increased significantly in recent years. The top five prolific countries were the United States, China, Germany, England, and France. The top five productive institutions were the University of California (Los Angeles), Harvard Medical School, Harvard University, University College London, and the University of Texas at Dallas. Notably, there was a geographical imbalance in countries and institutions. In addition, Epilepsy & Behavior, Epilepsia, and Plos One were the top three journals with the largest number of VNS publications. Michael P Kilgard was the most prolific author. Moreover, evolving research hotspots mainly included the effectiveness and mechanism of VNS on epilepsy, the role of VNS as an anti-inflammatory regulator, the application of VNS for psychiatric disorders, and the neuromodulation effect of VNS in headache management. Conclusion: This study has revealed the overall publication trends and evolving research trends at a global level over a 20-year panorama. The potential collaborators, institutions, hotspots, and future research trends are also identified in this field, which will help guide new research directions of VNS.

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