Abstract
Objective/HypothesisDeep brain stimulation (DBS) has become the preferred therapy for a growing number of treatment-resistant neuropsychiatric conditions, offering the benefit of being amenable to fine-tuning to enhance its efficacy. However, while some DBS parameters are routinely adjusted, the stimulation is almost always delivered in a continuous tonic pattern, which may be suboptimal at times. Our overall aim is to investigate the application of differing levels of rewarding DBS to the reconditioning of behavioral trigger and non-trigger stimuli in impulse-control disorders (including addiction). As a first step, we used a rat model of nucleus accumbens (NAc) DBS to rigorously compare the relative reward values of different stimulation paradigms. We hypothesized that delivering pulses in a more physiological pattern would prove more rewarding than delivering tonic stimulation.
Materials and MethodsWe implanted microelectrodes in the left NAc shell and trained rats to initiate and terminate DBS to demonstrate their preference between different brain stimulation reward (BSR) paradigms. We tested a range of BSR paradigms, including tonic, intermittent tonic, and burst paradigms. Two paradigms were compared at a time, and paired t-tests were used to determine whether the rats significantly preferred one paradigm over another.
ResultsThe rats significantly preferred intermittent tonic BSR paradigms to continuous and burst paradigms, and generally preferred paradigms that delivered more pulses over the stimulation period.
ConclusionsThese findings highlight that the standard approach of delivering tonic DBS is not optimal under all circumstances. Further research should investigate which DBS paradigms are best for different brain disorders.