Publications by authors named "Revathi Appali"

Article Synopsis
  • The increasing interest in using bioelectricity highlights its potential for therapeutic electrical stimulation, especially in musculoskeletal care before and after surgery.
  • Custom devices and conductive biomaterials have been developed to improve bone regeneration through electric fields (EF), but significant knowledge gaps remain due to varying EF parameters in research.
  • This review aims to categorize experimental methods and EF parameters to aid in mathematical modeling and to emphasize the importance of standardizing EF parameters and research outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is an established treatment for neurodegenerative movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease that mitigates symptoms by overwriting pathological signals from the central nervous system to the motor system. Nearly all computational models of DBS, directly or indirectly, associate clinical improvements with the extent of fiber activation in the vicinity of the stimulating electrode. However, it is not clear how such activation modulates information transmission.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A biophysical network model for the isolated striatal body is created to enhance deep brain stimulation (DBS) for conditions like obsessive-compulsive disorder.
  • The model is based on advanced equations and uses neuron positioning data from a human atlas, allowing it to distinguish between healthy and pathological neuronal activity.
  • It identifies optimal DBS parameters by balancing stimulation frequency, amplitude, and localization while revealing a trade-off between network activity and frequency synchronization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a highly effective treatment option in Parkinson's disease. However, the underlying mechanisms of action, particularly effects on neuronal plasticity, remain enigmatic. Adult neurogenesis in the subventricular zone-olfactory bulb (SVZ-OB) axis and in the dentate gyrus (DG) has been linked to various non-motor symptoms in PD, e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Moderate-to-profound sensorineural hearing loss in humans is treatable by electrically stimulating the auditory nerve (AN) with a cochlear implant (CI). In the cochlea, the modiolus presents a porous bony interface between the CI electrode and the AN. New bone growth caused by the presence of the CI electrode or neural degeneration inflicted by ageing or otological diseases might change the effective porosity of the modiolus and, thereby, alter its electrical material properties.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - This paper reviews various techniques for predicting the progression of multiple sclerosis (MS), categorizing existing methods into clinical, radiological, biological, and AI-based markers, while highlighting the need for a comprehensive evaluation of their strengths and weaknesses.
  • - The authors propose a new predictive approach combining computational models with established connectomes, specifically using the Hodgkin-Huxley model, which takes into account key properties altered in MS, like neuronal connection weights and signaling rates.
  • - The study aims to model neuronal signal propagation under MS conditions by adjusting conduction parameters in a small network and comparing the simulated results against a control, ultimately providing insights into the dynamics affected by the disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Under both physiological (development, regeneration) and pathological conditions (cancer metastasis), cells migrate while sensing environmental cues in the form of mechanical, chemical or electrical stimuli. In the case of bone tissue, osteoblast migration is essential in bone regeneration. Although it is known that osteoblasts respond to exogenous electric fields, the underlying mechanism of electrotactic collective movement of human osteoblasts is unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Increasing research has incorporated bioactive glass nanoparticles (BGN) and electric field (EF) stimulation for bone tissue engineering and regeneration applications. However, their interplay and the effects of different EF stimulation regimes on osteogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC) are less investigated. In this study, we introduced EF with negligible magnetic field strength through a well-characterized transformer-like coupling (TLC) system, and applied EF disrupted (4/4) or consecutive (12/12) regime on type I collagen (Col) coatings with/without BGN over 28 days.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sensorineural deafness is caused by the loss of peripheral neural input to the auditory nerve, which may result from peripheral neural degeneration and/or a loss of inner hair cells. Provided spiral ganglion cells and their central processes are patent, cochlear implants can be used to electrically stimulate the auditory nerve to facilitate hearing in the deaf or severely hard-of-hearing. Neural degeneration is a crucial impediment to the functional success of a cochlear implant.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mesenchymal stem cell dynamics involve cell proliferation and cell differentiation into cells of distinct functional type, such as osteoblasts, adipocytes, or chondrocytes. Electrically active implants influence these dynamics for the regeneration of the cells in damaged tissues. How applied electric field influences processes of individual stem cells is a problem mostly unaddressed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Measuring neuronal cell activity using microelectrode arrays reveals a great variety of derived signal shapes within extracellular recordings. However, possible mechanisms responsible for this variety have not yet been entirely determined, which might hamper any subsequent analysis of the recorded neuronal data.

Methods: To investigate this issue, we propose a computational model based on the finite element method describing the electrical coupling between an electrically active neuron and an extracellular recording electrode in detail.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Electric stimulation of neural tissues has been an effective clinical intervention to address a variety of pathological issues such as profound deafness, retinal diseases, and Parkinson's disease. However, the knowledge about the exact mechanism of neural excitation, especially activation sites is still ambiguous. Nevertheless, in silico models utilize two approaches namely activating function and sub-threshold potential to predict the activation sites of neural tissues.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Action Potentials in a neuron are generated and propagated by exchange of ions through the membrane. The model of Hodgkin and Huxley (HH) describes these time-dependent complex ion dynamics. We have implemented the FitzHugh-Nagumo model, one of the simplified versions of HH model on a pyramidal neuron with branches of axons to study the spontaneous activity of neurons.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF