Long-term anti-kindling effects of desynchronizing brain stimulation: a theoretical study |
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Authors: | Peter A. Tass Milan Majtanik |
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Affiliation: | (1) Institute for Medicine and Virtual Institute of Neuromodulation, Research Center Jülich, Leo-Brand-Street, 52425 Jülich, Germany;(2) Department of Stereotaxic and Functional Neurosurgery, University of Cologne, Joseph-Stelzmann-Street 9, 50924 Cologne, Germany;(3) Brain Imaging Center West, Leo-Brand-Street, 52425 Jülich, Germany |
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Abstract: | In a modeling study we show that desynchronization stimulation may have powerful anti-kindling effects. For this, we incorporate spike-timing-dependent plasticity into a generic network of coupled phase oscillators, which serves as a model network of synaptically interacting neurons. Two states may coexist under spontaneous conditions: a state of uncorrelated firing and a state of pathological synchrony. Appropriate stimulation protocols make the network learn or unlearn the pathological synaptic interactions, respectively. Low-frequency periodic pulse train stimulation causes a kindling. Permanent high-frequency stimulation, used as golden standard for deep brain stimulation in medically refractory movement disorders, basically freezes the synaptic weights. In contrast, desynchronization stimulation, e.g., by means of a multi-site coordinated reset, has powerful long-term anti-kindling effects and enables the network to unlearn pathologically strong synaptic interactions. We propose desynchronization stimulation for the therapy of movement disorders and epilepsies. |
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