Cortical-subcortical structural connections support transcranial magnetic stimulation engagement of the amygdala.
Valerie Jill SydnorMatthew C CieslakRomain DupratJoseph DeluisiMatthew W FloundersHannah LongMorgan ScullyNicholas L BalderstonYvette I ShelineDanielle S BassettTheodore Daniel SatterthwaiteDesmond J OathesPublished in: Science advances (2022)
The amygdala processes valenced stimuli, influences emotion, and exhibits aberrant activity across anxiety disorders, depression, and PTSD. Interventions modulating amygdala activity hold promise as transdiagnostic psychiatric treatments. In 45 healthy participants, we investigated whether transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) elicits indirect changes in amygdala activity when applied to ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (vlPFC), a region important for emotion regulation. Harnessing in-scanner interleaved TMS/functional MRI (fMRI), we reveal that vlPFC neurostimulation evoked acute and focal modulations of amygdala fMRI BOLD signal. Larger TMS-evoked changes in the amygdala were associated with higher fiber density in a vlPFC-amygdala white matter pathway when stimulating vlPFC but not an anatomical control, suggesting this pathway facilitated stimulation-induced communication between cortex and subcortex. This work provides evidence of amygdala engagement by TMS, highlighting stimulation of vlPFC-amygdala circuits as a candidate treatment for transdiagnostic psychopathology. More broadly, it indicates that targeting cortical-subcortical structural connections may enhance the impact of TMS on subcortical neural activity and, by extension, subcortex-subserved behaviors.
Keyphrases
- functional connectivity
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- resting state
- prefrontal cortex
- high frequency
- white matter
- temporal lobe epilepsy
- signaling pathway
- magnetic resonance imaging
- stress induced
- gene expression
- social media
- autism spectrum disorder
- oxidative stress
- drug induced
- big data
- intensive care unit
- liver failure
- hepatitis b virus
- mental health
- high resolution
- smoking cessation
- mass spectrometry
- diabetic rats
- genome wide
- computed tomography
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- single molecule