Effects of medial prefrontal transcranial alternating current stimulation on neural activity and connectivity in people with Huntington's disease and neurotypical controls

Date

2023

Authors

Davis, Marie-Claire
Fitzgerald, Paul
Bailey, Neil
Sullivan, Caley
Stout, Julie C.
Hill, Aron T.
Hoy , Kate E.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

We investigated the effects of transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) targeted to the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) on resting electroencephalographic (EEG) indices of oscillatory power, aperiodic exponent and offset, and functional connectivity in 22 late premanifest and early manifest stage individuals with HD and 20 neurotypical controls. Participants underwent three 20-minute sessions of tACS at least 72 hours apart; one session at alpha frequency (either each participant’s Individualised Alpha Frequency (IAF), or 10 Hz when an IAF was not detected); one session at delta frequency (2 Hz); and a session of sham tACS. Session order was randomised and counterbalanced across participants. EEG recordings revealed a reduction of the spectral exponent (‘flattening’ of the 1/f slope) of the eyes-open aperiodic signal in participants with HD following alpha-tACS, suggestive of an enhancement in excitatory tone. Contrary to expectation, there were no changes in oscillatory power or functional connectivity in response to any of the tACS conditions in the participants with HD. By contrast, alpha-tACS increased delta power in neurotypical controls, who further demonstrated significant increases in theta power and theta functional connectivity in response to delta-tACS. This study contributes to the rapidly growing literature on the potential experimental and therapeutic applications of tACS by examining neurophysiological outcome measures in people with HD as well as neurotypical controls.

Description

Keywords

Huntington’s disease (HD), Electroencephalography (EEG), Functional connectivity, Alpha, Delta, Oscillations, Transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS), Aperiodic activity

Citation

Source

Brain Research

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

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License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31