Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Electricity. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Electricity. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Năm, 5 tháng 5, 2016

Brain Waves, a new Source of Silent Electricity

Finding may help in understanding memory formation and treating epilepsy.



By: Jaime F. Adriazola

Brain waves that spread through the hippocampus are initiated by a method not seen before. According to researchers at Case Western Reserve University, this is a possible step towards assimilating and treating epilepsy.

The researchers discovered a traveling spike generator that appears to move across the hippocampus which is a part of the brain mainly associated with memory function and changing direction, while generating brain waves. However, the generator itself produces no electrical signal.

“In epilepsy, we’ve thought the focus of seizures is fixed and, in severe cases, that part of the brain is surgically removed,” said Dominique Durand, Elmer Lincoln Lindseth Professor in Biomedical Engineering at Case School of Engineering. “But if the focus, or source, of seizures moves–as we’ve described–that’s problematic.”

The findings in the Journal of Neuroscience builds on Durand’s work published late last year; identifying brain waves that appear to be spread through a mild electrical field. These are not the known transmissions through synapses, diffusion, or gap junctions.



The speed of the waves most closely matches those found in epilepsy, healthy sleep, and theta waves, which are thought to help form memories.

On this latest study, the leader Durand worked with PhD students Mingming Zhang, Rajat S. Shivacharan, postdoctoral researcher Chia-Chu Chiang, and research associate Luis E. Gonzales-Reyes.

Source Search

Working from the same data that revealed the brain waves, the team found that the source was also moving too slow for synaptic transmission, and a little too fast for diffusion.

“We don’t know what’s causing the propagation,” Durand said.
The engineers estimate the size of the source’s diameter is 300 to 500 micrometers. It appears to generate spikes all around its periphery, but the source moves nearly 100 times slower than the spikes.

“The source is like a moving car with pulsing lights,” Durand said.



To find the source of the waves, the team tracked spikes propagating through an unfolded rat hippocampus. They used a penetrating microelectrode array of 64 electrodes arranged in a grid on the tissue to record the activity.

The delay between the initial spike and the peaks recorded along consecutive electrodes in the grid was measured in milliseconds.
By inserting time values surrounding those recorded by each of the electrodes, the researchers refined the grid to include a total of 256 points or pixels.

Using this data, the researchers created an isochrone map; a map of lines connecting locations where a given spike arrived at the same time. The maps look something like topographical maps, but instead of showing elevations, the lines show the wave fronts as they spread over time.



The source of each wave propagation was estimated to be the geometric center of the electrodes that recorded the first neural firing at maximum amplitude.

Each brain wave appeared to have a slew of sources, firing it along either from the temporal region toward the septal or vice versa.

The team applied Doppler effect equations to the frequency of spikes in front and behind the source. Like the direct observations, the results strongly indicate the sources are moving smoothly across the hippocampus.

When a source reached the hippocampus edge, it started in the opposite direction. That may explain observations by others that waves moving in opposite directions have been found in the same brain tissue at the same time.



Digging deeper

Durand’s lab is trying to understand how a source that moves without diffusion can move without electricity and still generate electrical spikes.

The team is also trying to understand what these non-synaptic events do, and whether they are relevant to processing neural activity. Because the speed of these waves is close to the speed of sleep and theta waves, the researchers speculate that they may be involved in consolidating memory.

If the phenomenon is relevant to epilepsy, it may provide a target for therapies. “Can we block the spikes without blocking the source?” Durand asked.

The lab is now developing new neural imaging methods to better track sources and learn how they propagate spikes.



“The present discovery opens the door to future studies in transmission of thoughts, based on the diffusion of the Quantum Electrodynamics.”

Sources: Neurosciencenews.com NMJ Library

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