Introduction Gamma entrainment using sensory stimuli (GENUS) uses 40Hz-pulsed sensory stimuli to entrain neural activity in the gamma band (30-150Hz). However, the effect of GENUS on low-frequency vascular oscillations has not been fully explored. Objectives The objective of this study is to elucidate the effect of GENUS on vasomotion in healthy mice and potential confounds for future application in disease studies. Methods Head-fixed, awake C57Bl/6 mice (n=18; 9M 9F) aged between 18 to 60 weeks were subjected to white light of either 40Hz visual flicker (GENUS), or constant stimulus (control). Blood flow was imaged using laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) before, during, immediately after 1 hour of stimulus, and 30min after the stimulus termination. Results A linear mixed-effects model showed that GENUS enhanced the magnitude of 0.2-0.4Hz blood flow oscillations by 38% during stimulation and by 30% at 30 minutes after stimulation compared to control when controlled for age, sex, and other factors. The effect on vasomotion was distributed across many cortical regions not limited to visual areas and lasted beyond 24 hours post-stimulus. Conclusion These results support the exploration of GENUS for increasing vasomotion in therapeutic contexts.
Bressan, P. R., Long, E., Jiang, J., Vithayathil, R., Guan, Z., Song, Y., Rauscher, B. C., Chai, N., Kilic, K., Erdener, S. E., Devor, A., Boas, D. A., Tang, R.
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