keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31023834/spontaneous-cingulate-high-current-spikes-signal-normal-and-pathological-pain-states
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hsi-Chien Shih, Jenq-Wei Yang, Chia-Ming Lee, Bai-Chuang Shyu
Prominent 7-12 Hz oscillations in frontal cortical networks in rats have been reported. However, the mechanism of generation and the physiological function of this brain rhythm have not yet been clarified. Multichannel extracellular field potentials of the ACC were recorded and analyzed using the current source density method in halothane-anesthetized rats. Spontaneous high-current spikes (HCSs) were localized in the deep part of layer II/III and upper part of layer V of the ACC. The frequency of HCSs in the ACC was 7-12 Hz, with an amplitude of 6...
June 26, 2019: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30969798/thalamocortical-dysrhythmia-in-intraoperative-recordings-of-focal-epilepsy
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel J Martire, Simeon Wong, Mirriam Mikhail, Ayako Ochi, Hiroshi Otsubo, O Carter Snead, Elizabeth Donner, George M Ibrahim
Resonant interactions between the thalamus and cortex subserve a critical role for maintenance of consciousness as well as cognitive functions. In states of abnormal thalamic inhibition, thalamocortical dysrhythmia (TCD) has been described. The characteristics of TCD include a slowing of resting oscillations, ectopic high-frequency activity, and increased cross-frequency coupling. Here, we demonstrate the presence of TCD in four patients who underwent resective epilepsy surgery with chronically implanted electrodes under anesthesia, continuously recording activity from brain regions at the periphery of the epileptogenic zone before and after resection...
June 1, 2019: Journal of Neurophysiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30625004/aberrant-thalamocortical-coherence-in-an-animal-model-of-tinnitus
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paulo Vianney-Rodrigues, Benjamin D Auerbach, Richard Salvi
Electrophysiological and imaging studies from humans suggest that the phantom sound of tinnitus is associated with abnormal thalamocortical neural oscillations (dysrhythmia) and enhanced gamma band activity in the auditory cortex. However, these models have seldom been tested in animal models where it is possible to simultaneously assess the neural oscillatory activity within and between the thalamus and auditory cortex. To explore this issue, we used multichannel electrodes to examine the oscillatory behavior of local field potentials recorded in the rat medial geniculate body (MBG) and primary auditory cortex (A1) before and after administering a dose of sodium salicylate (SS) that reliably induces tinnitus...
March 1, 2019: Journal of Neurophysiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30106678/a-computational-model-of-thalamocortical-dysrhythmia-in-people-with-tinnitus
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard Gault, Thomas Martin Mcginnity, Sonya Coleman
Tinnitus is a problem that affects a diverse range of people. One common trait amongst people with tinnitus is the presence of hearing loss, which is apparent in over 90% of the cohort. It is postulated that the remainder of people with tinnitus have hidden hearing loss in the form of cochlear synaptopathy. The loss of hearing sensation is thought to cause a reduction in the bottom-up excitatory signals of the auditory pathway leading to a change in the frequency of thalamocortical oscillations known as thalamocortical dysrhythmia (TCD)...
September 2018: IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30035014/altered-regional-brain-t2-relaxation-times-in-individuals-with-chronic-orofacial-neuropathic-pain
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Z Alshelh, F Di Pietro, E P Mills, E R Vickers, C C Peck, G M Murray, L A Henderson
The neural mechanisms underlying the development and maintenance of chronic pain following nerve injury remain unclear. There is growing evidence that chronic neuropathic pain is associated with altered thalamic firing patterns, thalamocortical dysrhythmia and altered infra-slow oscillations in ascending pain pathways. Preclinical and post-mortem human studies have revealed that neuropathic pain is associated with prolonged astrocyte activation in the dorsal horn and we have suggested that this may result in altered gliotransmission, which results in altered resting neural rhythm in the ascending pain pathway...
2018: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30015361/surgical-neuromodulation-of-tinnitus-a-review-of-current-therapies-and-future-applications
#26
REVIEW
Richard Rammo, Rushna Ali, Aqueel Pabaney, Michael Seidman, Jason Schwalb
INTRODUCTION: Tinnitus is the conscious perception of an auditory sensation in the absence of external stimulus. Proposed theories are based on neuroplastic changes that occur due to sensory deprivation. The authors review the relevant literature on functional imaging and neuromodulation of tinnitus and describe potential targets for deep brain stimulation (DBS). MATERIALS AND METHODS: A MEDLINE keyword and Medical Subject Heading term literature search was performed using PubMed for tinnitus, neuromodulation, DBS, transcranial magnetic stimulation, epidural electrode stimulation, intradural electrode stimulation, functional imaging, and connectivity...
July 17, 2018: Neuromodulation: Journal of the International Neuromodulation Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29778070/high-intensity-binge-drinking-is-associated-with-alterations-in-spontaneous-neural-oscillations-in-young-adults
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rifqi O Affan, Siyuan Huang, Stephen M Cruz, Lee A Holcomb, Edward Nguyen, Ksenija Marinkovic
Heavy episodic alcohol consumption (also termed binge drinking) contributes to a wide range of health and cognitive deficits, but the associated brain-based indices are poorly understood. The current study used electroencephalography (EEG) to examine spontaneous neural oscillations in young adults as a function of quantity, frequency, and the pattern of their alcohol consumption. Sixty-one young adults (23.4 ± 3.4 years of age) were assigned to binge drinking (BD) and light drinking (LD) groups that were equated on gender, race/ethnic identity, age, educational background, and family history of alcoholism...
August 2018: Alcohol
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29549239/thalamocortical-dysrhythmia-detected-by-machine-learning
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sven Vanneste, Jae-Jin Song, Dirk De Ridder
Thalamocortical dysrhythmia (TCD) is a model proposed to explain divergent neurological disorders. It is characterized by a common oscillatory pattern in which resting-state alpha activity is replaced by cross-frequency coupling of low- and high-frequency oscillations. We undertook a data-driven approach using support vector machine learning for analyzing resting-state electroencephalography oscillatory patterns in patients with Parkinson's disease, neuropathic pain, tinnitus, and depression. We show a spectrally equivalent but spatially distinct form of TCD that depends on the specific disorder...
March 16, 2018: Nature Communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29343982/increased-theta-band-eeg-power-in-sickle-cell-disease-patients
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michelle Case, Sina Shirinpour, Huishi Zhang, Yvonne H Datta, Stephen C Nelson, Karim T Sadak, Kalpna Gupta, Bin He
Objective: Pain is a major issue in the care of patients with sickle cell disease (SCD). The mechanisms behind pain and the best way to treat it are not well understood. We studied how electroencephalography (EEG) is altered in SCD patients. Methods: We recruited 20 SCD patients and compared their resting state EEG to that of 14 healthy controls. EEG power was found across frequency bands using Welch's method. Electrophysiological source imaging was assessed for each frequency band using the eLORETA algorithm...
2018: Journal of Pain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29341331/the-relationship-between-thalamic-gaba-content-and-resting-cortical-rhythm-in-neuropathic-pain
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Flavia Di Pietro, Paul M Macey, Caroline D Rae, Zeynab Alshelh, Vaughan G Macefield, E Russell Vickers, Luke A Henderson
Recurrent thalamocortical connections are integral to the generation of brain rhythms and it is thought that the inhibitory action of the thalamic reticular nucleus is critical in setting these rhythms. Our work and others' has suggested that chronic pain that develops following nerve injury, that is, neuropathic pain, results from altered thalamocortical rhythm, although whether this dysrhythmia is associated with thalamic inhibitory function remains unknown. In this investigation, we used electroencephalography and magnetic resonance spectroscopy to investigate cortical power and thalamic GABAergic concentration in 20 patients with neuropathic pain and 20 pain-free controls...
May 2018: Human Brain Mapping
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29125416/gamma-oscillations-in-the-somatosensory-thalamus-of-a-patient-with-a-phantom-limb-case-report
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Diellor Basha, Jonathan O Dostrovsky, Suneil K Kalia, Mojgan Hodaie, Andres M Lozano, William D Hutchison
The amputation of an extremity is commonly followed by phantom sensations that are perceived to originate from the missing limb. The mechanism underlying the generation of these sensations is still not clear although the development of abnormal oscillatory bursting in thalamic neurons may be involved. The theory of thalamocortical dysrhythmia implicates gamma oscillations in phantom pathophysiology although this rhythm has not been previously observed in the phantom limb thalamus. In this study, the authors report the novel observation of widespread 38-Hz gamma oscillatory activity in spike and local field potential recordings obtained from the ventral caudal somatosensory nucleus of the thalamus (Vc) of a phantom limb patient undergoing deep brain stimulation (DBS) surgery...
November 10, 2017: Journal of Neurosurgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29108430/exploration-of-the-pathophysiology-of-chronic-pain-using-quantitative-eeg-source-localization
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leslie S Prichep, Jaini Shah, Henry Merkin, Emile M Hiesiger
Chronic pain affects more than 35% of the US adult population representing a major public health imperative. Currently, there are no objective means for identifying the presence of pain, nor for quantifying pain severity. Through a better understanding of the pathophysiology of pain, objective indicators of pain might be forthcoming. Brain mechanisms mediating the painful state were imaged in this study, using source localization of the EEG. In a population of 77 chronic pain patients, significant overactivation of the "Pain Matrix" or pain network, was found in brain regions including, the anterior cingulate, anterior and posterior insula, parietal lobule, thalamus, S1, and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), consistent with those reported with conventional functional imaging, and extended to include the mid and posterior cingulate, suggesting that the increased temporal resolution of electrophysiological measures may allow a more precise identification of the pain network...
March 2018: Clinical EEG and Neuroscience: Official Journal of the EEG and Clinical Neuroscience Society (ENCS)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28758313/altered-theta-oscillations-in-resting-eeg-of-fibromyalgia-syndrome-patients
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
N Fallon, Y Chiu, T Nurmikko, A Stancak
BACKGROUND: Fibromyalgia syndrome (FM) is a chronic pain disorder characterized by widespread pain, sleep disturbance, fatigue and cognitive/affective symptoms. Functional imaging studies have revealed that FM and other chronic pain syndromes can affect resting brain activity. This study utilized electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings to investigate the relative power of ongoing oscillatory activity in the resting brain. METHODS: A 64-channel EEG was recorded at rest in 19 female FM patients and 18 healthy, age-matched, control subjects...
January 2018: European Journal of Pain: EJP
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28217089/differential-modulation-of-rhythmic-brain-activity-in-healthy-adults-by-a-t-type-calcium-channel-blocker-an-meg-study
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kerry D Walton, Emeline L Maillet, John Garcia, Timothy Cardozo, Isaac Galatzer-Levy, Rodolfo R Llinás
1-octanol is a therapeutic candidate for disorders involving the abnormal activation of the T-type calcium current since it blocks this current specifically. Such disorders include essential tremor and a group of neurological and psychiatric disorders resulting from thalamocortical dysrhythmia (TCD). For example, clinically, the observable phenotype in essential tremor is the tremor itself. The differential diagnostic of TCD is not based only on clinical signs and symptoms. Rather, TCD incorporates an electromagnetic biomarker, the presence of abnormal thalamocortical low frequency brain oscillations...
2017: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27553899/auditory-thalamic-circuits-and-gaba-a-receptor-function-putative-mechanisms-in-tinnitus-pathology
#35
REVIEW
Donald M Caspary, Daniel A Llano
Tinnitus is defined as a phantom sound (ringing in the ears), and can significantly reduce the quality of life for those who suffer its effects. Ten to fifteen percent of the general adult population report symptoms of tinnitus with 1-2% reporting that tinnitus negatively impacts their quality of life. Noise exposure is the most common cause of tinnitus and the military environment presents many challenging high-noise situations. Military noise levels can be so intense that standard hearing protection is not adequate...
June 2017: Hearing Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27466345/increased-amplitude-of-thalamocortical-low-frequency-oscillations-in-patients-with-migraine
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Duncan J Hodkinson, Sophie L Wilcox, Rosanna Veggeberg, Rodrigo Noseda, Rami Burstein, David Borsook, Lino Becerra
UNLABELLED: For many years, neurobiological theories have emphasized the importance of neuronal oscillations in the emergence of brain function. At the same time, clinical studies have shown that disturbances or irregularities in brain rhythms may relate to various common neurological conditions, including migraine. Increasing evidence suggests that the CNS plays a fundamental role in the predisposition to develop different forms of headache. Here, we present human imaging data that strongly support the presence of abnormal low-frequency oscillations (LFOs) in thalamocortical networks of patients in the interictal phase of migraine...
July 27, 2016: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26791474/visual-snow-a-thalamocortical-dysrhythmia-of-the-visual-pathway
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jenny L Lauschke, Gordon T Plant, Clare L Fraser
In this paper we review the visual snow (VS) characteristics of a case cohort of 32 patients. History of symptoms and associated co-morbidities, ophthalmic examination, previous investigations and the results of intuitive colourimetry were collected and reviewed. VS symptoms follow a stereotypical description and are strongly associated with palinopsia, migraine and tinnitus, but also tremor. The condition is a chronic one and often results in misdiagnosis with psychiatric disorders or malingering. Colour filters, particularly in the yellow-blue colour spectrum, subjectively reduced symptoms of VS...
June 2016: Journal of Clinical Neuroscience: Official Journal of the Neurosurgical Society of Australasia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26791228/chronic-neuropathic-pain-it-s-about-the-rhythm
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zeynab Alshelh, Flavia Di Pietro, Andrew M Youssef, Jenna M Reeves, Paul M Macey, E Russell Vickers, Christopher C Peck, Greg M Murray, Luke A Henderson
The neural mechanisms underlying the development and maintenance of chronic neuropathic pain remain unclear. Evidence from human investigations suggests that neuropathic pain is associated with altered thalamic burst firing and thalamocortical dysrhythmia. Additionally, experimental animal investigations show that neuropathic pain is associated with altered infra-slow (<0.1 Hz) frequency oscillations within the dorsal horn and somatosensory thalamus. The aim of this investigation was to determine whether, in humans, neuropathic pain was also associated with altered infra-slow oscillations within the ascending "pain" pathway...
January 20, 2016: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26665004/source-space-cross-frequency-amplitude-amplitude-coupling-in-tinnitus
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Oliver Zobay, Peyman Adjamian
The thalamocortical dysrhythmia (TCD) model has been influential in the development of theoretical explanations for the neurological mechanisms of tinnitus. It asserts that thalamocortical oscillations lock a region in the auditory cortex into an ectopic slow-wave theta rhythm (4-8 Hz). The cortical area surrounding this region is hypothesized to generate abnormal gamma (>30 Hz) oscillations ("edge effect") giving rise to the tinnitus percept. Consequently, the model predicts enhanced cross-frequency coherence in a broad range between theta and gamma...
2015: BioMed Research International
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26565981/mindfulness-based-stress-reduction-mbsr-as-treatment-for-chronic-back-pain-an-observational-study-with-assessment-of-thalamocortical-dysrhythmia
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stefan Schmidt, Sophia Gmeiner, Claudia Schultz, Marc Löwer, Klaus Kuhn, José Raúl Naranjo, Christina Brenneisen, Thilo Hinterberger
BACKGROUND: A pilot study of an 8-week mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) program on a sample of low back pain patients was conducted in order to assess the feasibility and effectiveness of the intervention as well as changes in an EEG pattern called thalamocortical dysrhythmia which is associated with chronic pain. PATIENTS AND METHODS: 22 patients with chronic low back pain participated in an MBSR program. Effect sizes were measured for psychological functioning, pain severity, and quality of life...
2015: Research in Complementary Medicine
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