18 results on '"Gamboa OL"'
Search Results
2. Mindfulness intervention effect on endometriosis-related pain dimensions and its mediator role on stress and vitality: a path analysis approach.
- Author
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Moreira MF, Gamboa OL, and Oliveira MAP
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Pain etiology, Quality of Life, Stress, Psychological complications, Stress, Psychological therapy, Stress, Psychological psychology, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Endometriosis complications, Endometriosis therapy, Meditation methods, Mindfulness methods
- Abstract
Endometriosis-related pain is supposedly mainly responsible for generating psychological stress and deteriorating the quality of life. However, the interaction between these factors has not been investigated, considering its multidimensional nature and through the path of effects of psychosocial approaches. The present study aims to investigate the effect of a brief mindfulness-based intervention (bMBI) on pain dimensions and its mediator role on psychological stress and QoL-Vitality improvement. A secondary analysis of a pilot randomized controlled trial using a series of parallel and serial mediators was carried out. The results showed that bMBI improves the sensory (B = -6.09 [-9.81, -2.52], β = -0.42) and affective (B = -3.40 [-5.02, -1.80], β = -0.47) pain. The bMBI effect on psychological stress reduction was mediated by these changes in sensory (B = -2.81 [-6.06, -0.41], β = -0.21) and affective (B = -1.97 [-5.07, -0.17], β = -0.15) pain. Serial sensory pain and psychological stress reduction (B = 2.27 [0.11, 5.81], β = -0.09) mediated the bMBI effect on quality of life vitality. Meditation training promotes additional improvement in affective and sensory pain characteristics through which psychological stress is reduced. The sensory pain dimension must be positively impacted in combination with psychological stress for the bMBI improves women's vitality. Adding a psychosocial intervention like meditation training to the standard treatment plan may be required for some women to achieve the needed changes to restore well-being., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Austria, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
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3. Mindfulness-Based Intervention Effect on the Psychophysiological Marker of Self-Regulation in Women With Endometriosis-Related Chronic Pain.
- Author
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Moreira MF, Gamboa OL, and Oliveira MAP
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Anxiety, Chronic Pain psychology, Mindfulness methods, Endometriosis complications, Endometriosis therapy, Self-Control
- Abstract
Endometriosis is a gynecological disease that involves a broad biopsychosocial compromise with the potential to create a negative vicious cycle. Despite the complexity of factors influencing women's improvement, most interventions investigated target just the peripheral nociceptive sources of endometriosis-related pain. An alternative is intervening in self-regulation, which can potentially influence multiple domains of the illness experience. The present study examines the effect of a brief Mindfulness-Based Intervention (bMBI) on attention and autonomic nervous system regulation in women with endometriosis-related pain. Also, explore the interaction between these self-regulation domains and the affective pain dimension. An exploratory analysis of the secondary outcomes of a pilot randomized controlled trial was performed. The vagally-mediated Heart Rate Variability (vmHRV) at rest, cognitive stress, and recovery was employed to measure autonomic regulation. The Flanker and Stroop tasks were used to estimate the attention domains. Results showed that bMBI (n = 26) significantly improved Flanker accuracy and Flanker and Stroop reaction time compared to the control group (n = 28). bMBI significantly increased vmHRV at rest and recovery after cognitive stress. Attention mediated the bMBI effect on affective pain improvement. Results suggest that bMBI improves self-regulation domains with the potential to develop a broad biopsychosocial benefit in the endometriosis context. PERSPECTIVE: This article demonstrates the positive impact of a brief Mindfulness-Based Intervention on attention and parasympathetic regulation in women suffering from endometriosis-related pain. This mindfulness-induced self-regulation improvement can benefit affective pain and potentially multiple psychophysiological processes relevant to endometriosis., (Copyright © 2023 United States Association for the Study of Pain, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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4. Cognitive-affective changes mediate the mindfulness-based intervention effect on endometriosis-related pain and mental health: A path analysis approach.
- Author
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Moreira MF, Gamboa OL, and Pinho Oliveira MA
- Abstract
Background: There is poor knowledge about the therapeutic mechanisms of the conservative interventions for endometriosis. We hypothesized that the effects of a brief mindfulness-based intervention (bMBI) on pelvic pain intensity (PPI), pain unpleasantness (PU) and quality of life mental health (QoL-MH) are mediated by direct and indirect paths of changes in pain catastrophizing (PC), positive affect (PA) and negative affect (NA)., Methods: A secondary analysis of a pilot randomized controlled trial of women with endometriosis, assigned to standard medical treatment (n = 32) and standard medical treatment plus bMBI (n = 31). We tested a series of parallel and serial mediators (PC, PA and NA) of the relationship between bMBI and outcomes (PPI, PU and QoL-MH)., Results: The bMBI group demonstrated improvement in PA (Cohen's f
2 = 0.12 [0.01, 0.36]), decreases in NA (Cohen's f2 = 0.06 [0.00, 0.24]) and PC (Cohen's f2 = 0.16 [0.02, 0.42]). The PC reduction mediated the effect of the bMBI on PPI and PU directly; however, the PC effect through PA increase mediated the PU marginally but not PPI changes. bMBI effect on Qol-MH was mediated directly by PA and NA. The PC improved Qol-MH through PA increase and Pain decrease but not via NA., Conclusions: Our findings showed that bMBI impacts pain through changes in pain-related cognitive-affective factors. bMBI can improve QoL-MH by multiple pathways, including but not limited to pain reduction, highlighting the independent potential of improvement in affect to restore mental health in endometriosis., Significance: Brief mindfulness-based intervention improves endometriosis pain through pain-related cognitive-affective factors and quality of life mental health via pain and affect changes unrelated to pain., (© 2023 European Pain Federation - EFIC ®.)- Published
- 2023
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5. A questionnaire to collect unintended effects of transcranial magnetic stimulation: A consensus based approach.
- Author
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Giustiniani A, Vallesi A, Oliveri M, Tarantino V, Ambrosini E, Bortoletto M, Masina F, Busan P, Siebner HR, Fadiga L, Koch G, Leocani L, Lefaucheur JP, Rotenberg A, Zangen A, Violante IR, Moliadze V, Gamboa OL, Ugawa Y, Pascual-Leone A, Ziemann U, Miniussi C, and Burgio F
- Subjects
- Consensus, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation adverse effects, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation methods
- Abstract
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) has been widely used in both clinical and research practice. However, TMS might induce unintended sensations and undesired effects as well as serious adverse effects. To date, no shared forms are available to report such unintended effects. This study aimed at developing a questionnaire enabling reporting of TMS unintended effects. A Delphi procedure was applied which allowed consensus among TMS experts. A steering committee nominated a number of experts to be involved in the Delphi procedure. Three rounds were conducted before reaching a consensus. Afterwards, the questionnaire was publicized on the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology website to collect further suggestions by the wider scientific community. A last Delphi round was then conducted to obtain consensus on the suggestions collected during the publicization and integrate them in the questionnaire. The procedure resulted in a questionnaire, that is the TMSens_Q, applicable in clinical and research settings. Routine use of the structured TMS questionnaire and standard reporting of unintended TMS effects will help to monitor the safety of TMS, particularly when applying new protocols. It will also improve the quality of data collection as well as the interpretation of experimental findings., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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6. Obliviate! Reviewing Neural Fundamentals of Intentional Forgetting from a Meta-Analytic Perspective.
- Author
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Gamboa OL, Chuan-Peng H, Salas CE, and Yuen KSL
- Abstract
Intentional forgetting (IF) is an important adaptive mechanism necessary for correct memory functioning, optimal psychological wellbeing, and appropriate daily performance. Due to its complexity, the neuropsychological processes that give birth to successful intentional forgetting are not yet clearly known. In this study, we used two different meta-analytic algorithms, Activation Likelihood Estimation (ALE) & Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) to quantitatively assess the neural correlates of IF and to evaluate the degree of compatibility between the proposed neurobiological models and the existing brain imaging data. We found that IF involves the interaction of two networks, the main "core regions" consisting of a primarily right-lateralized frontal-parietal circuit that is activated irrespective of the paradigm used and sample characteristics and a second less constrained "supportive network" that involves frontal-hippocampal interactions when IF takes place. Additionally, our results support the validity of the inhibitory or thought suppression hypothesis. The presence of a neural signature of IF that is stable regardless of experimental paradigms is a promising finding that may open new venues for the development of effective clinical interventions.
- Published
- 2022
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7. A single-blind, randomized, pilot study of a brief mindfulness-based intervention for the endometriosis-related pain management.
- Author
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Moreira MF, Gamboa OL, and Pinho Oliveira MA
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Pain Management, Pelvic Pain, Pilot Projects, Quality of Life, Single-Blind Method, Endometriosis complications, Endometriosis therapy, Mindfulness
- Abstract
Background: Women with endometriosis suffer from frequent symptoms despite multiple treatments in tertiary care. Although there is a need for a biopsychosocial perspective on endometriosis treatment, few conservative treatments have been investigated. We aimed to investigate the effects of a brief Mindfulness-Based Intervention (bMBI) in women with deep endometriosis who remain symptomatic despite undergoing conventional medical treatment., Methods: A randomized controlled trial was performed with two groups: a standard medical treatment plus bMBI program and only standard medical treatment as a control. A total of 63 eligible participants were randomized to bMBI and control groups. The primary outcome was endometriosis-related pain, and secondary outcomes were quality of life and stress perception post-treatment. Analyses were carried out using multiple regression models., Results: The results show that bMBI significantly improved pain unpleasantness (Cohen's f
2 = 0.67, NNT = 3.2), pelvic pain (Cohen's f2 = 0.16, NNT = 5.3) and dyschezia (Cohen's f2 = 0.23, NNT = 2.9) immediately post-treatment and decreased all endometriosis-related pain (Cohen's f2 ranging from 0.20 to 0.60 and NNT ranging from 5 to -9) after the follow-up. We found an extensive positive effect of bMBI on the mental health dimension in the two time point measures (Cohen's f2 = 0.34 and 0.25, NNT = 3.5 and 2.3) and vitality (Cohen's f2 = 0.22, NNT = 2.1) after the follow-up., Conclusions: Our study suggests that bMBI is useful for managing endometriosis-related pain and restoring women's psychological well-being., Significance: Brief Mindfulness-Based Intervention (bMBI) improved endometriosis-related pain and mental health compared to standard medical care. The present findings contribute to the applicability of MBI in visceral pain patients., (© 2022 European Pain Federation - EFIC®.)- Published
- 2022
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8. Association between severity of pain, perceived stress and vagally-mediated heart rate variability in women with endometriosis.
- Author
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de França Moreira M, Gamboa OL, and Pinho Oliveira MA
- Subjects
- Female, Heart Rate, Humans, Pain Measurement, Pelvic Pain etiology, Stress, Psychological, Endometriosis complications
- Abstract
Chronic pelvic pain is the main symptom in women with endometriosis. Evidence suggests that psychological stress and autonomic regulation contribute to symptoms and pathophysiological modulation. We investigated the relationship between endometriosis-related pain severity, perceived stress, and autonomic balance in a sample of 81 women suffering chronic pelvic pain with deep endometriosis. Perceived stress and pelvic pain symptoms were assessed using the 10-item version of the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10) and the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS), respectively. Autonomic nervous system regulation was evaluated using vagally mediated components of the heart rate variability (vmHRV). Our results showed that pain unpleasantness and perceived stress were positively correlated, and women with mood disorders had higher perceived stress. The women with low resting vmHRV experience more intense pelvic pain, pain unpleasantness, and a higher number of severe endometriosis-related pain descriptors. The positive association between perceived stress, mood disorder, and pain unpleasantness demonstrates the additive effect between these aversive experiences. The inverse association between parasympathetic tone and pain suggests contributions of the Descending Inhibitory Pain pathway efficiency to symptom severity in women with endometriosis.
- Published
- 2021
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9. Application of long-interval paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation to motion-sensitive visual cortex does not lead to changes in motion discrimination.
- Author
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Gamboa OL, Brito A, Abzug Z, D'Arbeloff T, Beynel L, Wing EA, Dannhauer M, Palmer H, Hilbig SA, Crowell CA, Liu S, Donaldson R, Cabeza R, Davis SW, Peterchev AV, Sommer MA, and Appelbaum LG
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Neural Inhibition physiology, Occipital Lobe physiology, Rest physiology, Motion Perception physiology, Motor Cortex physiology, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation methods, Visual Cortex physiology
- Abstract
The perception of visual motion is dependent on a set of occipitotemporal regions that are readily accessible to neuromodulation. The current study tested if paired-pulse Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (ppTMS) could modulate motion perception by stimulating the occipital cortex as participants viewed near-threshold motion dot stimuli. In this sham-controlled study, fifteen subjects completed two sessions. On the first visit, resting motor threshold (RMT) was assessed, and participants performed an adaptive direction discrimination task to determine individual motion sensitivity. During the second visit, subjects performed the task with three difficulty levels as TMS pulses were delivered 150 and 50 ms prior to motion stimulus onset at 120% RMT, under the logic that the cumulative inhibitory effect of these pulses would alter motion sensitivity. ppTMS was delivered at one of two locations: 3 cm dorsal and 5 cm lateral to inion (scalp-based coordinate), or at the site of peak activation for "motion" according to the NeuroSynth fMRI database (meta-analytic coordinate). Sham stimulation was delivered on one-third of trials by tilting the coil 90°. Analyses showed no significant active-versus-sham effects of ppTMS when stimulation was delivered to the meta-analytic (p = 0.15) or scalp-based coordinates (p = 0.17), which were separated by 29 mm on average. Active-versus-sham stimulation differences did not interact with either stimulation location (p = 0.12) or difficulty (p = 0.33). These findings fail to support the hypothesis that long-interval ppTMS recruits inhibitory processes in motion-sensitive cortex but must be considered within the limited parameters used in this design., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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10. Editorial: Non invasive Stimulation Techniques: "Modulating Cognition".
- Author
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Gamboa OL
- Published
- 2019
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11. The challenge of forgetting: Neurobiological mechanisms of auditory directed forgetting.
- Author
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Gamboa OL, Sung Lai Yuen K, von Wegner F, Behrens M, and Steinmetz H
- Subjects
- Adult, Attention physiology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain Mapping, Cognition physiology, Female, Humans, Inhibition, Psychological, Language, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Qualitative Research, Young Adult, Auditory Perception physiology, Brain physiology, Memory physiology
- Abstract
Directed forgetting (DF) is considered an adaptive mechanism to cope with unwanted memories. Understanding it is crucial to develop treatments for disorders in which thought control is an issue. With an item-method DF paradigm in an auditory form, the underlying neurocognitive processes that support auditory DF were investigated. Subjects were asked to perform multi-modal encoding of word-stimuli before knowing whether to remember or forget each word. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we found that DF is subserved by a right frontal-parietal-cingulate network. Both qualitative and quantitative analyses of the activation of this network show converging evidence suggesting that DF is a complex process in which active inhibition, attentional switching, and working memory are needed to manipulate both unwanted and preferred items. These results indicate that DF is a complex inhibitory mechanism which requires the crucial involvement of brain areas outside prefrontal regions to operate over attentional and working memory processes. Hum Brain Mapp 39:249-263, 2018. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc., (© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2018
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12. Suppress to Forget: The Effect of a Mindfulness-Based Strategy during an Emotional Item-Directed Forgetting Paradigm.
- Author
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Gamboa OL, Garcia-Campayo J, Müller T, and von Wegner F
- Abstract
Forgetting is a common phenomenon in everyday life. Although it often has negative connotations, forgetting is an important adaptive mechanism to avoid loading the memory storage with irrelevant information. A very important aspect of forgetting is its interaction with emotion. Affective events are often granted special and priority treatment over neutral ones with regards to memory storage. As a consequence, emotional information is more resistant to extinction than neutral information. It has been suggested that intentional forgetting serves as a mechanism to cope with unwanted or disruptive emotional memories and the main goal of this study was to assess forgetting of emotional auditory material using the item-method directed forgetting (DF) paradigm using a forgetting strategy based on mindfulness as a means to enhance DF. Contrary to our prediction, the mindfulness-based strategy not only did not improve DF but reduced it for neutral material. These results suggest that an interaction between processes such as response inhibition and attention is required for intentional forgetting to succeed.
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- 2017
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13. Working memory performance of early MS patients correlates inversely with modularity increases in resting state functional connectivity networks.
- Author
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Gamboa OL, Tagliazucchi E, von Wegner F, Jurcoane A, Wahl M, Laufs H, and Ziemann U
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- Humans, Memory Disorders etiology, Mental Recall, Multiple Sclerosis complications, Rest, Statistics as Topic, Task Performance and Analysis, Brain physiopathology, Connectome methods, Memory Disorders physiopathology, Memory, Short-Term, Multiple Sclerosis physiopathology, Nerve Net physiopathology, Neuronal Plasticity
- Abstract
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune inflammatory demyelinating and neurodegenerative disorder of the central nervous system characterized by multifocal white matter brain lesions leading to alterations in connectivity at the subcortical and cortical level. Graph theory, in combination with neuroimaging techniques, has been recently developed into a powerful tool to assess the large-scale structure of brain functional connectivity. Considering the structural damage present in the brain of MS patients, we hypothesized that the topological properties of resting-state functional networks of early MS patients would be re-arranged in order to limit the impact of disease expression. A standardized dual task (Paced Auditory Serial Addition Task simultaneously performed with a paper and pencil task) was administered to study the interactions between behavioral performance and functional network re-organization. We studied a group of 16 early MS patients (35.3±8.3 years, 11 females) and 20 healthy controls (29.9±7.0 years, 10 females) and found that brain resting-state networks of the MS patients displayed increased network modularity, i.e. diminished functional integration between separate functional modules. Modularity correlated negatively with dual task performance in the MS patients. Our results shed light on how localized anatomical connectivity damage can globally impact brain functional connectivity and how these alterations can impair behavioral performance. Finally, given the early stage of the MS patients included in this study, network modularity could be considered a promising biomarker for detection of earliest-stage brain network reorganization, and possibly of disease progression., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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14. A method for obtaining Schwann cell cultures from adult rabbit nerve based on "in vitro" pre-degeneration and neuregulin treatment.
- Author
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de la Fuente I, Alcalde I, Gamboa OL, Garrosa M, and Gayoso MJ
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- Animals, Cell Culture Techniques, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Cells, Cultured, Female, Fibroblasts pathology, Male, Rabbits, Schwann Cells pathology, Sciatic Nerve pathology, Time Factors, Tissue Culture Techniques, Nerve Degeneration pathology, Neuregulin-1 pharmacology, Schwann Cells drug effects, Sciatic Nerve drug effects
- Abstract
Schwann cells (SCs) are basic elements for cell therapy and tissue engineering in the central and peripheral nervous system. Therefore, the development of a reliable method to obtain SC cultures is required. For possible therapeutic applications the cultures need to produce a sufficiently large number of SCs with a high level of purity in a relatively short period of time. To increase SC yield and purity we pre-degenerated pieces of 1-2 mm of adult rabbit sciatic nerves by incubating them for seven days in Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's Medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, penicillin/streptomycin and NRG1-β1. Following pre-degeneration the nerve pieces were dissociated and then cultured for 6 or 15 days in the same culture medium. After 6 days of culture we obtained around 9.5x10³ cells/mg with approximately 94% SCs (S-100 positive) purity. After 15 days of culture the yield was about 80x10³ cells/mg and the purity was approximately 75%. Pre-degeneration and subsequent culture of small pieces of adult nerve with NRG1-β1 supplemented medium increased the number of SCs and restricted the overgrowth of fibroblast-like cells.
- Published
- 2012
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15. Impact of repetitive theta burst stimulation on motor cortex excitability.
- Author
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Gamboa OL, Antal A, Laczo B, Moliadze V, Nitsche MA, and Paulus W
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, Evoked Potentials, Motor physiology, Motor Cortex physiology, Neuronal Plasticity physiology, Neurons physiology
- Abstract
Theta burst stimulation (TBS) alters cortical excitability in inhibitory or facilitatory directions depending on the pattern of stimulation used. Although continuous TBS (cTBS) decreases motor cortex excitability, intermittent TBS (iTBS) increases excitability by introducing an 8-second stimulation interval after 2 seconds of TBS. The after-effects induced by TBS last from 30 minutes up to 1 hour. Optimization of TBS techniques might be possible through manipulation of a variety of parameters such as number of pulses, stimulus intensity, duration of stimulation, and repetitive stimulation. The aim of this study was to assess the after-effects induced by introducing an interval between two TBS interventions to identify more efficient protocols. The study was divided in two groups, iTBS protocols and cTBS protocols, each of them with four sessions: classical TBS, TBS - 2 minutes - TBS, TBS - 5 minutes - TBS, TBS - 20 minutes - TBS. Our results show that cTBS - 20 minutes - cTBS and iTBS - 2 minutes - iTBS resulted in similar after-effects as those accomplished by a single TBS session, whereas a suppression of after-effects was observed in the other break durations. Repeated TBS with short break durations does not seem to be suitable to prolong the duration of excitability changes accomplished by single TBS. These results might be relevant for clinical applications of TBS, when long-lasting excitability alterations are needed., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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16. Electrical estimulation of retinal pigment epithelial cells.
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Gamboa OL, Pu J, Townend J, Forrester JV, Zhao M, McCaig C, and Lois N
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cell Line, Transformed, Cell Movement physiology, Cell Polarity physiology, Cell Proliferation, Cell Survival physiology, Cells, Cultured, Electromagnetic Fields, Gelatin pharmacology, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Male, Serum physiology, Wound Healing, Electric Stimulation, Retinal Pigment Epithelium physiology
- Abstract
We investigated and characterized the effect of externally applied electric fields (EF) on retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells by exposing primary cultures of human RPE cells (hRPE) and those from the ARPE19 immortalized cell line to various strengths of EF (EF-treated cells) or to no EF (control cells) under different conditions including presence or absence of serum and gelatin and following wounding. We evaluated changes in RPE cell behavior in response to EF by using a computer based image capture and analysis system (Metamorph). We found that RPE cells responded to externally applied EFs by preferential orientation perpendicular to the EF vector, directed migration towards the anode, and faster translocation rate than control, untreated cells. These responses were voltage-dependent. Responses were observed even at low voltages, of 50-300 mV. Furthermore, the migration of hRPE cell sheets generated by wounding of confluent monolayers of cells at early and late confluence could be manipulated by the application of EF, with directed migration towards the anode observed at both sides of the wounded hRPE. In conclusion, RPE cell behaviour can be controlled by an externally applied EF. The potential for externally applied EF to be used as a therapeutic strategy in the management of selected retinal diseases warrants further investigation., (Copyright 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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17. Simply longer is not better: reversal of theta burst after-effect with prolonged stimulation.
- Author
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Gamboa OL, Antal A, Moliadze V, and Paulus W
- Subjects
- Adult, Electric Stimulation methods, Electromyography, Female, Humans, Male, Motor Cortex physiology, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, Evoked Potentials, Motor physiology, Long-Term Potentiation physiology, Neuronal Plasticity physiology, Reaction Time physiology, Theta Rhythm
- Abstract
From all rTMS protocols at present, the theta burst stimulation (TBS) is considered the most efficient in terms of number of impulses and intensity required during a given stimulation. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of inhibitory and excitatory TBS protocols on motor cortex excitability when the duration of stimulation was doubled. Fourteen healthy volunteers were tested under four conditions: intermittent theta bust stimulation (iTBS), continuous theta burst stimulation (cTBS), prolonged intermittent theta bust stimulation (ProiTBS) and prolonged continuous theta burst stimulation (ProcTBS). The prolonged paradigms were twice as long as the conventional TBS protocols. Conventional facilitatory iTBS converted into inhibitory when it was applied for twice as long, while the normally inhibitory cTBS became facilitatory when the stimulation duration was doubled. Our results show that TBS-induced plasticity cannot be deliberately enhanced simply by prolonging TBS protocols. Instead, when stimulating too long, after-effects will be reversed. This finding supplements findings at the short end of the stimulation duration range, where it was shown that conventional cTBS is excitatory in the first half and switches to inhibition only after the full length protocol. It is relevant for clinical applications for which an ongoing need for further protocol improvement is imminent.
- Published
- 2010
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18. Absence of relevant effects of 5 mT static magnetic field on morphology, orientation and growth of a rat Schwann cell line in culture.
- Author
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Gamboa OL, Gutiérrez PM, Alcalde I, De la Fuente I, and Gayoso MJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Rats, Schwann Cells cytology, Schwann Cells radiation effects, Time Factors, Cell Polarity radiation effects, Cell Proliferation radiation effects, Cell Shape radiation effects, Electromagnetic Fields, Schwann Cells physiology
- Abstract
The aim of this study is to observe possible changes in the morphology, orientation or cell growth of an in vitro cultured Schwann cell line by 24 h exposure to 5 mT static magnetic fields. The magnetic field generator basically consists of a pair of circular coils in a Helmholtz arrangement and enables temperature to be controlled (37+/-0.1 degrees C). We did not find any statistically significant differences in the cell growth rate between control and exposed cells, nor did we observe any differences in cell morphology or orientation.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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