Brain Stimulation (Nov 2022)

kHz-frequency electrical stimulation selectively activates small, unmyelinated vagus afferents

  • Yao-Chuan Chang,
  • Umair Ahmed,
  • Naveen Jayaprakash,
  • Ibrahim Mughrabi,
  • Qihang Lin,
  • Yi-Chen Wu,
  • Michael Gerber,
  • Adam Abbas,
  • Anna Daytz,
  • Arielle H. Gabalski,
  • Jason Ashville,
  • Socrates Dokos,
  • Loren Rieth,
  • Timir Datta-Chaudhuri,
  • Kevin J. Tracey,
  • Tianruo Guo,
  • Yousef Al-Abed,
  • Stavros Zanos

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
pp. 1389 – 1404

Abstract

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Background: Vagal reflexes regulate homeostasis in visceral organs and systems through afferent and efferent neurons and nerve fibers. Small, unmyelinated, C-type afferents comprise over 80% of fibers in the vagus and form the sensory arc of autonomic reflexes of the gut, lungs, heart and vessels and the immune system. Selective bioelectronic activation of C-afferents could be used to mechanistically study and treat diseases of peripheral organs in which vagal reflexes are involved, but it has not been achieved. Methods: We stimulated the vagus in rats and mice using trains of kHz-frequency stimuli. Stimulation effects were assessed using neuronal c-Fos expression, physiological and nerve fiber responses, optogenetic and computational methods. Results: Intermittent kHz stimulation for 30 min activates specific motor and, preferentially, sensory vagus neurons in the brainstem. At sufficiently high frequencies (>5 kHz) and at intensities within a specific range (7–10 times activation threshold, T, in rats; 15-25 × T in mice), C-afferents are activated, whereas larger, A- and B-fibers, are blocked. This was determined by measuring fiber-specific acute physiological responses to kHz stimulus trains, and by assessing fiber excitability around kHz stimulus trains through compound action potentials evoked by probing pulses. Aspects of selective activation of C-afferents are explained in computational models of nerve fibers by how fiber size and myelin shape the response of sodium channels to kHz-frequency stimuli. Conclusion: kHz stimulation is a neuromodulation strategy to robustly and selectively activate vagal C-afferents implicated in physiological homeostasis and disease, over larger vagal fibers.

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