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Klaus P. Ebmeier is Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Edinburgh (Department of Psychiatry, Kennedy Tower, Morningside Park, Edinburgh EH10 5HF0). His research interests include the general psychiatry of adults and old age and neuroimaging. Julia M. Lappin is a senior house officer in psychiatry in Edinburgh. Her research interests are in neuroscience.
One hundred years ago, D'Arsonval and Beer first described the effects of magnetic fields on human brain function. Placing one's head into a powerful magnet produced phosphenes, vertigo or even syncopes (George & Belmaker, 2000). However, only since 1985 has the technology of fast discharging capacitors developed sufficiently to generate reproducible effects across the intact skull, with peak magnetic field strengths of about 1-2 tesla (Barker et al, 1985). The headline-grabbing news has been about therapeutic applications of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), but in the meantime a revolution in functional brain research has taken place, based on the manipulation of brain activity by focused magnetic fields. TMS applied in this way is, in a manner of speaking, brain imaging in the reverse. While common modes of functional brain imaging, such as positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), demonstrate associations between brain metabolic activity and brain tasks, the causal interpretation of such associations can be difficult. Is the frontal lobe activation observed during a memory task, for example, necessary for performing the task, or does it correspond to monitoring activity that runs parallel to task performance proper? If, on the other hand, focal brain activation during TMS results in a muscle twitch, there is no doubt that stimulation of at least some of the neurons within the magnetic field is sufficient cause for the observed movement. Functional neuroimaging is now often combined with TMS, carried out in the same session in order to exploit the complementary strengths of the methods. Although direct stimulation of association (as opposed to motor or sensory) cortex does not usually result in an observable response, TMS applied in repetitive trains can produce reversible lesions. By interfering with tasks that are dependent on the functioning of the stimulated neurons, it can thus contribute to the localisation of brain function.
In this article we will give the reader a concise overview, not only of the as yet immature efforts to treat psychiatric conditions with TMS, but also of the use of TMS as a research tool to clarify the brain mechanisms of psychiatric illness (see also Lisanby et al, 2000).
| Physics and physiology of TMS |
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Typically, the current running through the insulated coil is of the order of 10 000 amperes, with a magnetic field strength of 1 tesla, a specific absorption per pulse of 2.46 mJ/kg and a specific absorption rate at 1 Hz stimulation frequency of 2.46 mW/kg brain tissue, as described by Bohning (2000). The simplest coils are circular with a magnetic field the shape of a torus (ring doughnut) enveloping the coil. Unless the coil is held on end, the magnetic field will extend over areas of cortex (e.g. 5-7 cm diameter) that are larger than desirable. A practicable compromise is the figure-of-eight-shaped coil that has a magnetic field of two superimposed tori, with a conical shape above and below the crossover of the two circles that has an effective diameter of a couple of centimetres.
The neuronal mechanisms of TMS are not entirely clear. Changing electric fields are generated parallel and possibly also perpendicular to the axon, which may cause neuronal discharges. In reality, within a given volume of stimulation, axons will be running in different orientations, maybe even bending along their course, so that the net effect of TMS over a particular cortical area is difficult to predict. The effects of TMS on short fibres, cell bodies or dendrites are not known (Bohning, 2000).
A central concept in practical TMS is the motor threshold, a measure that varies between subjects owing to skull thickness and head shape, but also to functional factors such as cortical excitability, medication and acute brain state, for example, induced by recent exercise. It allows for an intrinsic calibration of stimulus strength, which is crucial, both for safety reasons (see below) and in order to use comparable stimulus strengths in experiments conducted between subjects. By convention the motor threshold is defined by the stimulus strength that evokes five out of 10 muscle potentials, usually in a hand muscle, with an amplitude of 50 µV or more. The mapping of the position with the best electromyogram (EMG) response for a given muscle, such as the abductor pollicis brevis, and the determination of the threshold stimulus strength require some skill and experience in neurophysiology, which makes TMS not as easily accessible to the clinician as, for example, electroconvulsive therapy (ECT).
A number of measures derived from stimulation of the motor cortex have been used to derive diagnostic markers. Cortical excitability, examined with TMS, can be defined as an intracortical mechanism that is observable through a variable motor response to standardised TMS. The most obvious measure of excitability is the EMG amplitude after a stimulus above motor threshold. Responses to standard stimuli can differ because of the varying contributions of excitatory and inhibitory input from interneurons to the primary motor cortex. Because TMS mainly acts via inter-neurons, it is an ideal method to assess cortical excitability. The TMS response is dependent on pre-stimulus muscle activity, in that the amplitude of the motor evoked potentials (MEP) is enhanced after exercise and reduced during fatigue. Previous magnetic stimulation also affects subsequent TMS response: a short interval (10-40 ms) between a first and a second stimulus over the same point is associated with response enhancement; longer intervals (40-200 ms) are associated with a suppression of the second response. It is presently believed that the mechanisms responsible for these phenomena are cortical in origin (Ziemann & Hallet, 2000). A similar, although not identical, phenomenon is the so-called silent period, a period of EMG silence after a TMS stimulus. Similar to single stimuli, repetitive TMS (rTMS) has effects of its own on cortical excitability. Many investigators now assume that at low frequencies (<1 Hz) there is a reduction in the brain activity of the underlying areas (quenching; Chen et al, 1997), whereas at higher frequencies (>5 Hz) excitability increases, in extreme cases to the point of facilitating excitation of adjacent brain areas or even grand mal seizures (Pascual-Leone et al, 1993).
| Safety issues |
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Stimulation over an active portion of cortex can disrupt the function of this structure (Pascual-Leone & Hallett, 1994). The obvious question therefore is whether rTMS in the course of, for example, antidepressant treatment, has cognitive side-effects. Lorbeerbaum & Wassermann (2000) report that studies have generally been negative, or have found changes only within hours of treatment. They conclude that the chance of producing excitotoxicity with rTMS is very remote. During antidepressant treatment any possible deleterious effects of rTMS will be confounded by practice effects and the effect of recovery from depression over the course of treatment (see Fig. 1
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| Investigative use in schizophrenia |
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| Investigative use in affective disorders |
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| Therapeutic use in schizophrenia |
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| Therapeutic use in affective disorders |
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| Box 1. Imaging Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) functional imaging studies can be used to establish an association between activity in a neuronal network and behaviour. By transiently blocking function in a cortical structure, a causal link can be demonstrated between behaviour and regional brain function. There are various methods by which the brain can be imaged during TMS, including single photon emission computerised tomography (SPECT), positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Measuring brain activity during TMS holds promise for the investigation of cortical connectivity and excitability in both the healthy and the disordered human brain. Changes in these parameters in relation to motor and sensory learning, cortical reorganisation following injury, possible abnormalities of connectivity in patients with schizophrenia and normal development of connections in childhood and adolescence are likely (Paus, 1999).
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Spontaneous remission or placebo response rates in depressive illness vary considerably (20-60%), so that even sizeable improvement rates in open TMS studies of depression may not indicate superiority to placebo. A serious problem in evaluating TMS is the absence of a true placebo condition. Previous strategies include angling the stimulation coil away from the head surface. However, there is some doubt whether subjects cannot differentiate between flat and angled coil positions by the strength of superficial nerve and muscle stimulation. Some authors have also cast doubt on the assumption that with an angled coil no activation of cortical tissue occurs, arguing that therapeutic effects may be expected from this supposed placebo treatment (Lisanby & Sackeim, 2000). An alternative approach involves the use of specially prepared coils that have the same amount of energy running in separate conductors in opposite directions, thereby neutralising the magnetic field. Such coils are presently being evaluated. Their advantage is that they can be placed identically to the active coil and that they produce the same stimulus-related click, but because of the absence of a net magnetic field, the surface stimulation will be different. The other important drawback of existant TMS treatment studies in depression is that none has examined long-term effects in a systematic manner. Depression is clearly often a recurring and relapsing condition, so that treatment efficacy has to be evaluated over longer periods. As TMS is generally not expected to be effective for more than a few days after discontinuation (Pascual-Leone et al, 1996), the replicability of any treatment success needs to be examined.
With these caveats in mind, it is of interest to look at the effect sizes of the published trials that involved more than 15 patients with depression (see Table 1
). Among the open trials are those of Conca et al (1996), Figiel et al (1998) and Grunhaus et al (1998). Conca et al (1996) used single pulse stimulation (0.17 Hz) over multiple sites in a randomised subgroup of six out of 12 patients with depression on medication. TMS appeared to increase the speed of response. Figiel et al (1998) found that 42% of 56 patients who were mostly medication-resistant responded to left dorsolateral prefrontal stimulation at 10 Hz, with a lower response rate in the elderly subgroup of patients. Grunhaus et al (1998) compared 16 patients receiving rTMS at 10 Hz over the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex with 18 patients randomised into standard ECT treatment. While he found that for patients without psychoses the response rates were comparable, ECT had the clear edge in the subgroup with psychoses. This study is clearly too small to draw any definite conclusions, but larger trials are underway.
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In summary, these are interesting preliminary results suggesting that TMS may have antidepressant effects. However, there is no convincing evidence so far that a particular stimulation mode, be it frequency or placement over the head, is superior to others. This casts doubt on any hypotheses about the action of TMS and raises the suspicion that non-specific effects may be important.
Other electromagnetic modalities
The potential hazard of seizure induction during rTMS has recently been turned into a potential strength, by using a varying magnetic field to induce seizures during magnetoconvulsive therapy (MCT) (personal communication, T. Schlaepfer, 2000). Without the vagaries of poor and variable electrical conductivity, which allows only a small proportion of the current applied during ECT to pass through the brain, MCT can focus and dose the brain stimulation more accurately and reliably, with the potential benefits of limiting stimulation to the brain structures essential for treatment response and, hopefully, reducing side-effects such as memory impairment.
Most recently, vagus stimulation by implanted pacemaker, a treatment method previously used for the control of epileptic seizures, has been applied to the treatment of depression (George et al, 2000; Rush et al, 2000). Thirty treatment-resistant patients with depression but not psychosis received an implant of a pacemaker stimulating the left cervical vagus nerve using bipolar electrodes, attached below the cardiac branch. Stimulation was mostly with 0.5 ms pulse-width, at 20-30 Hz, with 30 s stimulation periods alternating with 300 s breaks. This open protocol was sustained over 10 weeks, with a response rate of 40% at end-point. Patients had failed to respond to at least two robust treatment attempts, and had an average duration of illness episode of 10 years (0.3-49.5 years). The most common stimulation-related adverse event was voice alteration, usually hoarseness, in 40%; pain, coughing and dysphagia each affected 10%. Considering the severity of illness, this is an encouraging result that warrants further controlled studies.
Although the treatments described above are still experimental, it is likely that ECT will be joined by other physical treatments of depression in the not too distant future.
| Multiple choice questions |
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| References |
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