Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in Awake Rhesus macaques: Validation of a Novel Non-invasive Apparatus
Padanyi, A.; Knakker, B.; Kiefer, E.; Lendvai, B.; Hernadi, I.
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Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive brain stimulation technique widely employed in basic and clinical research. Non-human primates (NHPs) represent translationally valuable models due to their close anatomical and functional similarity to humans. However, significant technical challenges remain in implementing human-like TMS protocols in awake NHPs. Here we developed a non-invasive head- and arm-fixation apparatus that enables reliable stimulation and electromyography recordings in awake NHPs without surgical intervention and validated the apparatus with two TMS protocols in rhesus macaques. First, we implemented an adaptive motor threshold (MT) determination method developed recently for humans, which converged successfully to valid MTs as defined by the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Second, we measured a robust short-interval intracortical inhibition effect for the first time in awake NHPs. Successful implementation of human TMS protocols in awake NHPs provides proof-of-concept validation of our apparatus, paving the way to bidirectionally translatable, clinically relevant neuromodulation protocols.
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