Simulation of the electrical stimulation of the rat brain using sleep frequencies: A finite element modeling approach.

Angela Maria Gomez, J F Escobar-Huertas,D L Linero,F P Cardenas,D A Garzón-Alvarado

Journal of theoretical biology(2022)

Cited 0|Views4
No score
Abstract
A realistic rat brain model was used to simulate current density and electric field distributions under frequencies characteristic of sleeping states (0.8, 5, and 12 Hz). Two anode-electrode setups were simulated: plate vs. screws-anode, both with a cephalic cathode. Our simulations showed that these frequencies have limited impact on electric field and current density; however, the highest frequency evidenced higher values for both variables. The type of electrode setup had a greater effect on current distribution and induced fields. In that sense, the screws setup resulted in higher values of the modeled variables. The numeric results obtained are within the range of available data for rodent models using the finite elements method. These modeled effects should be analyzed regarding anatomical consequences (depth of penetration of the currents) and purpose of the experiment (i.e., entrainment of brain oscillations) in the context of sleep research.
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined