Webinars

Launched in 2020, the Brainbox Initiative Webinar Series is a free resource designed to stimulate the ongoing discussion and promotion of the fascinating work being carried out in the field of non-invasive brain stimulation and imaging research. Our webinars are hosted by a global range of guest speakers from academia and industry alike to provide a broad, accessible, and engaging series of talks and discussions that is open to everyone. We will continue to add further webinars to this series over time, so make sure to check back here and on our YouTube channel to ensure that you don’t miss any talks.

Reversible Disconnection of Deep Brain Circuits with Low-Intensity Focused Ultrasound of White Matter Tracts: A Pilot Study in Major Depressive Disorder

Reversible Disconnection of Deep Brain Circuits with Low-Intensity Focused Ultrasound of White Matter Tracts: A Pilot Study in Major Depressive Disorder, 23 May 2024

Speaker
Dr. Salvador M. Guinjoan 
Principal Investigator, Laureate Institute for Brain Research
Adult Psychiatrist, Laureate Psychiatric Clinic & Hospital
Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Oklahoma University
Research Associate Professor, Tulsa University


Webinar abstract
Burgeoning in vitro evidence demonstrates that low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) operates mechanosensitive potassium channels in nodes of Ranvier, thus hyperpolarizing and possibly disrupting saltatory conduction in myelinated axons. We translated these findings to explore potential in vivo human applications, and targeted with LIFU a historical psychosurgical target for depression, the anterior limb of the internal capsule. Specifically, we focused on individually-defined white matter tracts connecting the thalamus with both orbitofrontal and anterior cingulate cortices in a group of patients suffering from Major Depressive Disorder, and measured resting state fMRI functional connectivity between the thalamus and diverse regions of the cortex. Preliminary results indicate functional disconnection between the areas reached by the sonicated white matter tracts, along with top-down peripheral autonomic and behavioral effects. If confirmed in a larger sample, we hope that these results could pave the way for probing, in a reversible and noninvasive manner, the causative role of deep large-scale circuits in the generation of symptoms of depression.

Date and time:
May 23, 2024 - 15:00 BST

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Past webinars

You can find below our full range of past Brainbox Initiative Webinars, available for you to view on demand. We work closely will all of our speakers to ensure that we bring as much of this content to you as possible, and we will continue to keep this page updated as we bring more webinars into the range.