Effects of Short-Term Random Noise Electrical Stimulation on Dissociated Pyramidal Neurons from the Cerebral Cortex

2019 
Abstract Transcranial random noise electrical stimulation (tRNS) of the human brain is a non-invasive technique that can be employed to increase the excitability of the cerebral cortex; however, the physiological mechanisms remain unclear. Here we report for the first time the effects of short-term (250 ms) random noise electrical stimulation (RNS) on in-vitro acutely-isolated brain pyramidal neurons from the somatosensory and auditory cerebral cortex. We analyzed the correlation between the peak amplitude of the Na + current and its latency for different levels of RNS. We found three groups of neurons. The first group exhibited a positive correlation, the second, a negative correlation, and the third group of neurons did not exhibit correlation. In the first group, both the peak amplitude of a TTX-sensitive Na + current and its inverse of latency followed similar inverted U-like functions relative to the electrical RNS level. In this group, the RNS levels in which the maximal values of the inverted U-like functions occurred were the same. In the second group, the maximal values of the inverted U-like functions occurred at different levels. In the third group, only the peak amplitude of the Na + current exhibited a clear inverted U-like function, but the inverse of the latency versus the electrical RNS, did not exhibit a clear inverted U-like function. A Hodgkin–Huxley neuron model reproduces our experimental results and shows that the observed behavior in the Na + current could be due to the impact of RNS on the kinetics of activation and inactivation of the Na + channels.
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