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Magnetic Stimulation as a Therapeutic Approach for Brain Modulation and Repair: Underlying Molecular and Cellular Mechanisms

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms242216456

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rTMS; LI-rTMS; magnetic stimulation; neuromodulation; non-invasive brain stimulation; magnetoreceptor

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Neurological and psychiatric diseases often have no cure, so non-invasive brain stimulation techniques, such as pulsed magnetic fields, are being explored as potential therapeutic tools. However, the use of different stimulation parameters makes the study of magnetic brain stimulation complex. This review aims to bring together research from human, animal, and in vitro studies to understand the biology of magnetic brain stimulation. The review identifies common effects, interactions with nervous tissue, and underlying cellular mechanisms. Recent advances in magneto-biology provide insights into the mechanisms underlying low-intensity stimulation effects, suggesting the potential of low-intensity focal magnetic stimulation as a powerful treatment tool for humans.
Neurological and psychiatric diseases generally have no cure, so innovative non-pharmacological treatments, including non-invasive brain stimulation, are interesting therapeutic tools as they aim to trigger intrinsic neural repair mechanisms. A common brain stimulation technique involves the application of pulsed magnetic fields to affected brain regions. However, investigations of magnetic brain stimulation are complicated by the use of many different stimulation parameters. Magnetic brain stimulation is usually divided into two poorly connected approaches: (1) clinically used high-intensity stimulation (0.5-2 Tesla, T) and (2) experimental or epidemiologically studied low-intensity stimulation (mu T-mT). Human tests of both approaches are reported to have beneficial outcomes, but the underlying biology is unclear, and thus optimal stimulation parameters remain ill defined. Here, we aim to bring together what is known about the biology of magnetic brain stimulation from human, animal, and in vitro studies. We identify the common effects of different stimulation protocols; show how different types of pulsed magnetic fields interact with nervous tissue; and describe cellular mechanisms underlying their effects-from intracellular signalling cascades, through synaptic plasticity and the modulation of network activity, to long-term structural changes in neural circuits. Recent advances in magneto-biology show clear mechanisms that may explain low-intensity stimulation effects in the brain. With its large breadth of stimulation parameters, not available to high-intensity stimulation, low-intensity focal magnetic stimulation becomes a potentially powerful treatment tool for human application.

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