sexta-feira, 2 de outubro de 2009

Campos eletromagnéticos da EMTr avaliam reflexos no autismo

Os cientistas estão tentando uma nova abordagem para desvendar o funcionamento do cérebro autista: o equivalente neurológico de bater no joelho de um paciente com um martelo para testar os reflexos.
Em vez de um martelo, no entanto, os investigadores estão pressionando uma pá plana contra as cabeças dos doentes e criar um campo magnético que provoca a atividade das células cerebrais.
Como a busca da compreensão do autismo tem crescido, os pesquisadores usaram scanners cerebrais para perscrutar mentes autistas, procurar por genes defeituosos, e examinou as brincadeiras de crianças de 1 ano de idade.
O trabalho tem previsto teorias - mas poucas respostas concretas - sobre o que dá errado para causar isolamento social, comportamentos repetitivos e problemas de comunicação que afligem estimadadamente 1 em 150 crianças com transtornos do espectro do autismo. A pesquisa tem abrangido tudo, desde os neurônios "espelhos", as células do cérebro alguns pesquisadores acreditam que ajuda as pessoas a compreender as ações e intenções de outros, até um crescimento excessivo de ligações locais no cérebro. 



Now a small but growing number of researchers see hope in a tool called transcranial magnetic stimulation, which lets scientists spark activity in specific areas of the brain and watch what happens to patients' behavior. The technology may illuminate some of the biology behind the disease, and some specialists speculate it may one day offer a treatment.
"There's a lot of mystery about autism - it's not as if there's a well-understood story of what's going on at all, and there's a huge variety of autism, too," said John Gabrieli, a neuroscientist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Transcranial magnetic stimulation "is fantastic for identifying brain regions that are essential for specific mental functions. . . . I think if we can start to use it more systematically with autism, one could hope we'd understand a lot more about what's going on."
Gabrieli said he hopes to team up with researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center who are already getting preliminary results with the technology, finding that autistic brains appear to be more malleable than those of other people.
Researchers at the Boston hospital's Berenson-Allen Center for Noninvasive Brain Stimulation used rapid, repetitive stimulation to simulate what happens in the brain when people learn a new task. Then they gave a single pulse of stimulation and measured minute muscle twitches that told them how long people's brains maintained connections formed by the initial stimulation.
In people with no evidence of autism, changes lasted about 30 minutes, on average. But in people on the autism spectrum, the initial stimulation caused brain changes that lasted much longer - on average an hour and a half.
"As they're going through their world, their brains are changing their circuits much more and much longer," said Lindsay Oberman, a postdoctoral researcher at Beth Israel Deaconess. "They're making connections, just not breaking them at the same rate as normal people."
That suggests to Oberman that important cognitive processes may be getting stuck on labyrinthine side roads.
Researchers in the laboratory are also investigating whether stimulating a specific area of the brain improves language skills.
John Elder Robison, 51, said he decided to participate in the experiments because it wasn't until he reached adulthood that he was diagnosed with Asperger syndrome, a disease on the autism spectrum.
"I have a strong desire to do this to benefit people like me," Robison said. "I knew how much I had struggled as a young person - not knowing, being called 'retard' or 'freak.' This might help young people."
Use of transcranial magnetic stimulation to investigate autism is in its early days, but the technology is well-established. In the noninvasive procedure, a current travels through two loops in a figure-eight-shaped paddle, creating a changing magnetic field. The paddle is pressed against the patient's head, and the changing field induces an electrical current in brain tissue.
Transcranial magnetic stimulation was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration as a depression treatment last fall. The main side effect is a risk of seizure, but the risk is low, researchers say, because years of research have provided insight into how to use the technology safely.
While such stimulation may turn out to be a useful tool in autism research, Michael Merzenich, emeritus professor at the University of California at San Francisco, cautioned that a limitation of the technology may be that so much has gone wrong in the autistic brain.
"Virtually any way you would probe it in detail, you'd quickly reveal abnormalities," Merzenich said. "My question is, if I start poking around . . . it's a pretty complex, multivariable mess that I'm poking. How likely is it that's going to lead to great insight?"
Dr. Manuel Casanova, a neuroscientist at the University of Louisville, began using the technique on patients a few years ago.
Casanova was interested in groups of brain cells called minicolumns, which are abnormally small in autistic people and seem to lack what he calls an inhibitory "shower curtain" that prevents activity from spilling into the rest of the brain. His idea was to boost the shower curtain using the stimulation.
Casanova reported last year in the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders that when he used repetitive stimulation on 13 high-functioning people with autism spectrum disorder, the treatment seemed to improve synchronization between brain regions. The patients were also able to sit still longer, follow directions better, and reduce repetitive behaviors.
Initially, he paid for the research out of his own pocket, but last week he received gratifying validation - a grant from the National Institutes of Health to support his work over the next four years.


continua... artigo em ingles estimulacao magnetica e autismo 

terça-feira, 29 de setembro de 2009

O que é Estimulação Magnética Transcraniana (EMTr)?


A Estimulação Magnética Transcraniana (EMTr) ou repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) é uma técnica neurofisiológica que permite a indução de uma corrente no cérebro usando um campo magnético que atravessa o couro cabeludo e crânio de maneira indolor.

A EMTr é aplicada colocando uma espiral metálica envolta em plástico (bobina) sobre a cabeça, emitindo pulsos magnéticos que induzem uma corrente elétrica na região cerebral focal.

Dependendo da freqüência utilizada os estímulos podem aumentar ou diminuir a atividade da área cerebral atingida e assim pode-se usar terapeuticamente modulando (equilibrando) o funcionamento dos neuronios de acordo com o problema apresentado.

A EMTr /rTMS vem sendo usada há 20 anos para diversos fins principalmente em neurologia (investigação neurofuncional, estudo das funções cognitivas, diagnóstico da transmissão nervosa) e há 10 anos no campo da psiquiatria principalmente no tratamento dos quadros de depressão, TOC, ansiedade, transtorno bipolar.

Em virtude da facilidade do tratamento e dos resultados obtidos na depressão, equivalentes às demais modalidades mas com a vantagem de não apresentar efeitos colaterais, observou-se nos últimos anos a multiplicação de centros médicos e de pesquisa em estimulação magnética cerebral nos mais respeitados centros universitários ao redor do mundo.