Background: Nociceptive pain is required for healthy function, yet, neuropathic pain (disease or injury) can be severely debilitating. Though a wide-array of treatment options are available, they are often systemic and/or invasive. As a promising neuromodulation treatment, Focused ultrasound (FUS) is a noninvasive and highly spatially-targeted technique shown to stimulate neural activity, yet, effects on pain signaling are currently unknown.

Objective: Develop and validate a method for studying FUS nerve stimulation modulation of pain-evoked neural responses in vivo.

Methods: We developed a high-resolution functional ultrasound (fUS) method capable of mapping cortical responses in healthy and neuropathic pain mice in response to FUS neuromodulation treatment.

Results: FUS-evoked hemodynamic responses are correlated with the intensity of peripheral neuromodulation. We confirm functional connectivity is altered in neuropathic mice and demonstrate that FUS can modulate neuropathic pain-evoked hemodynamics.

Conclusions: The findings presented herein provides evidence for an FUS-based nerve pain method and validates the fUS technique developed for monitoring pain-evoked hemodynamics.

Significance: We anticipate that the findings presented herein describe a noninvasive and flexible nerve modulation technique for pain mitigation, furthering evidence for clinical translation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11105977PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TBME.2024.3352025DOI Listing

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