Ultrasound and Increasing Brain Function

Posted by Jack

We know that mild electrical stimulation through the scalp can produced some positive effects on the brain. We also know that certain medication for narcolepsy can improve IQ, but did you know that ultrasound to stimulate highly targeted areas of the brain may be the best of all 3? Science may finally be on verge of an effective neuro stimulation that could treat a host of mental disorders.

Ultrasound also has potential for mapping the connectivity of the brain. Neuroscientists are particularly interested in understanding how brain areas chat with one another; in fact, a new federal project, the BRAIN Initiative, has the goal of mapping the healthy human brain. [Inside the Brain: A Photo Journey Through Time]

Ultrasound is one of several noninvasive methods that stimulate the brain. Another is transcranial magnetic stimulation, which stimulates the brain with magnets. A third is transcranial direct current stimulation, which uses electrodes to deliver a weak electrical current to the brain through the scalp.
The new study suggests that ultrasound may be the best of the bunch.

“We can use ultrasound to target an area of the brain as small as the size of an M&M,” study researcher William Tyler, a neuroscientist at the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute, said in a statement. “This finding represents a new way of noninvasively modulating human brain activity with a better spatial resolution than anything currently available.”

Surprising improvement

Tyler and his colleagues focused on sensory perception from the hand. They first placed an electrode on the wrist, over the nerve that carries impulses from the hand to the brain. Using a small electrical current, they stimulated that nerve while focusing ultrasound on the brain region that processes the nerve’s signals.
The researchers recorded the participants’ brain responses with electroencephalography (EEG), electrodes on the scalp that measure the electrical activity of the brain. The ultrasound weakened the brain waves that encode the tactile stimulation, they found.

But the next set of experiments revealed something truly strange.

The researchers conducted two tests of sensory perception. In the first, participants feel two pins against their skin and must distinguish whether they are being touched at one or two points. The closer the pins are to each other, the harder the task. In the second, researchers blow a series of air puffs against the participants’ skin, and they must determine how many individual puffs they feel. The faster the puffs, the harder they are to discriminate.

Instead of these weak brain signals translating to poorer sensory perception, people’s performance actually improved on both tests. “Our observations surprised us,” Tyler said. “Even though the brain waves associated with the tactile stimulation had weakened, people actually got better at detecting differences in sensations.”

Tweaking the brain

What might explain this seeming paradox? The answer might have to do with how neurons function. When brain cells communicate, they can urge their neighbors to become active (excitation) or tell everyone to quiet down (inhibition). The ultrasound may have affected the brain region’s balance of excitation and inhibition, Tyler said.
As a result, the excitation impulses may not have spread so far, essentially giving the brain a better triangulation of where the sensory inputs were coming from.
The boost in sensory perception vanished when researchers moved the ultrasound’s focus just a half inch (1 centimeter). That means the method is a fine-grained way to “tweak” brain circuits, both to map their activity and potentially to treat brain disorders.

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4 Responses to Ultrasound and Increasing Brain Function

  1. Joe says:

    No ultrasound is powerful enough to put common sense in the brains of liberals.

    And while were talking anatomy…you’d better be very careful, Captain Jack.

    If you must refer to a certain part of the female anatomy you better use the term “front-hole”

    ttps://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-08-22/not-onion-cali-health-org-replaces-vagina-gender-inclusive-front-hole

    If you don’t the back-holes will accuse you of hate speech.

  2. Joe says:

    And Captain Jack, what ultrasound could possibly fix this?

    Drag Queen Story Hour sparks protests in conservative towns
    https://www.yahoo.com/news/drag-queen-story-hour-sparks-protests-conservative-towns-130205923.html

    NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Once upon a time, in 2015, a writer in San Francisco named Michelle Tea got the idea for “Drag Queen Story Hour”: men in full drag reading children’s books to kids and parents in programs aimed at providing “positive and unabashedly queer role models.”

    Since then, Drag Queen Story Hours have been held at libraries or book stores in big cities including Los Angeles, Chicago, New York, and costume-loving New Orleans — where over-the-top hair, makeup and gowns and stories about gender fluidity aren’t exactly new.

    I don’t think you’ll find many “front-holes” reading to the kiddies at drag queen story hour…but you will find plenty of back-holes.

    What kind of parent would expose their kid to this?

    Do you have an answer, Jack?

  3. Pie Guevara says:

    I assume that “non invasive” here means that no scalpels are involved. I tend to disagree.

    Every bit of the brain depends distinctly on the flow and crossflow of information via an electro-chemical neuronal bridge. Anything that influences that bridge is invasive, be it a knife, be it a chemical, be it any form of mechanical or electromagnetic wave strong enough to have an effect.

    I do not mean to nit pick, but here, as in all medical science, is the treatment efficacious and low risk or not?

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