4.4 Article

Transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation at nonspecific timings during training can compromise motor adaptation in healthy humans

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 130, Issue 1, Pages 212-223

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00447.2022

Keywords

motor learning; VNS; tVNS; vagus nerve stimulation; transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation

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This study aimed to understand the neuromotor adaptations when transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (tVNS) is applied at nonspecific timings during motor skill training in healthy humans. The results showed that the reduction in motor adaptation rate was attenuated in the tVNS group compared with the sham group, while the in-session reduction rate did not differ between groups. There was no difference between groups in the adaptation rate to an untrained trajectory pattern. Corticospinal excitability and GABA-mediated intracortical inhibition did not show any training effect. These findings suggest that adding tVNS at nonspecific timings during motor skill training can compromise motor adaptation but not transfer in healthy humans.
Adding afferent vagus nerve stimulation to motor training via implanted electrodes can modify neuromotor adaptation depending on the stimulation timing. This study aimed to understand neuromotor adaptations when transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (tVNS) is applied at nonspecific timings during motor skill training in healthy humans. Twenty-four healthy young adults performed visuomotor training to match a complex force trajectory pattern with the index and little finger abduction forces concurrently. Participants were assigned to the tVNS group receiving tVNS at the tragus or the sham group receiving sham stimulation to the earlobe. The corresponding stimulations were applied at nonspecific timings throughout the training trials. Visuomotor tests were performed without tVNS or sham stimulation before and after training sessions across days. The reduction in the root mean square error (RMSE) against the trained force trajectory was attenuated in the tVNS group compared with the sham group, while its in-session reduction was not different between groups. The reduction of RMSE against an untrained trajectory pattern was not different between groups. No training effect was observed in corticospinal excitability or GABA-mediated intracortical inhibition. These findings suggest that adding tVNS at nonspecific timings during motor skill training can compromise motor adaptation but not transfer in healthy humans.

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