Litcius/Paper detail

Modulation of the prefrontal blood oxygenation response to intermittent theta-burst stimulation in depression: A sham-controlled study with functional near-infrared spectroscopy

Wiebke Struckmann, Jonas Persson, Wojciech Weigl, Malin Gingnell, Robert Bodén

2020The World Journal of Biological Psychiatry17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objective To better understand the neural mechanisms behind the effect of intermittent theta-burst stimulation (iTBS), we investigated how the prefrontal blood oxygenation response measured by changes in oxygenated haemoglobin (oxy-Hb) was modulated during a sham-controlled iTBS treatment course, and whether this was related to depressive symptom change.Methods In this randomised, double-blind study, patients with ongoing treatment-resistant depression received either active (n = 18) or sham (n = 21) iTBS over the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex for ten to fifteen days with two sessions daily. Event-related functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) was measured during each iTBS train, and resting-state oxy-Hb was compared before and after each iTBS session at the first, fifth, and last treatment day.Results Patients receiving active iTBS had an increase of the event-related oxy-Hb response compared to the sham group on the fifth (bilateral prefrontal cortices p < .001) and last (left prefrontal p = .007, right prefrontal p = .025) treatment day. Resting-state analysis showed suppressed oxy-Hb change in active iTBS compared to sham iTBS on the last treatment day (p = .024). Oxy-Hb change was unrelated to depressive symptom change (p = .474).Conclusions This study describes a modulation of the blood oxygenation response over the prefrontal cortex that was built up during the course of active iTBS treatment in depression.

Topics & Concepts

Prefrontal cortexStimulationOxygenationDepression (economics)Functional near-infrared spectroscopyPsychologyMedicineInternal medicineMajor depressive disorderAnesthesiaNeuroscienceCardiologyCognitionMacroeconomicsEconomicsOptical Imaging and Spectroscopy TechniquesAnxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive ProcessesTreatment of Major Depression