4.7 Article

Evaluating Current Density Modeling of Non-Invasive Eye and Brain Electrical Stimulation Using Phosphene Thresholds

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNSRE.2021.3120148

Keywords

Alternating current stimulation; current-flow modelling; phosphene; transorbital stimulation

Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [P41 GM103545-18]
  2. Free State of Thuringia [2017 VF 0035, 2018 IZN 004]
  3. European Union through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)
  4. Ministry of Lower Saxony for Science and Culture [76251-12-7/19, ZN 3456]

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Phosphene threshold measurements were used as surrogate markers to investigate the relationship between phosphene thresholds evoked by transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) and current density estimates generated by head model-based computer simulations. Results showed that lower phosphene thresholds were associated with higher simulated current levels in unilateral montages of the model head, with the F7-F8 montage having the lowest phosphene threshold.
Because current flow cannot be measured directly in the intact retina or brain, current density distribution models were developed to estimate it during magnetic or electrical stimulation. A paradigm is now needed to evaluate if current flow modeling can be related to physiologically meaningful signs of true current distribution in the human brain. We used phosphene threshold measurements (PTs) as surrogate markers of current-flow to determine if PTs, evoked by transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS), can be matched with current density estimates generated by head model-based computer simulations. Healthy, male subjects (n=15) were subjected to three-staged PT measurements comparing six unilateral and one bilateral stimulation electrode montages according to the 10/20 system: Fp2-Suborbital right (So), Fp2-right shoulder (rS), Fp2-Cz, Fp2-O2, So-rS, Cz-F8 and F7-F8. The stimulation frequency was set at 16 Hz. Subjects were asked to report the appearance and localization of phosphenes in their visual field for every montage. Current density models were built using multi-modal imaging data of a standard brain, meshed with isotropic conductivities of different tissues of the head using the SimBio and SCIRun software packages. We observed that lower PTs were associated with higher simulated current levels in the unilateral montages of the model head, and shorter electrode distances to the eye had lower PTs. The lowest mean PT and the lowest variability were found in the F7-F8 montage (95 +/- 33 mu A). Our results confirm the hypothesis that phosphenes are primarily of retinal origin, and they provide the first in vivo evidence that computer models of current flow using head models are a valid tool to estimate real current flow in the human eye and brain.

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