A microfluidic perspective on conventional in vitro transcranial direct current stimulation methods
Review article, 2023

Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is a promising non-invasive brain stimulation method to treat neurological and psychiatric diseases. However, its underlying neural mechanisms warrant further investigation. Indeed, dose–response interrelations are poorly understood. Placing explanted brain tissue, mostly from mice or rats, into a uniform direct current electric field (dcEF) is a well-established in vitro system to elucidate the neural mechanism of tDCS. Nevertheless, we will show that generating a defined, uniform, and constant dcEF throughout a brain slice is challenging. This article critically reviews the methods used to generate and calibrate a uniform dcEF. We use finite element analysis (FEA) to evaluate the widely used parallel electrode configuration and show that it may not reliably generate uniform dcEF within a brain slice inside an open interface or submerged chamber. Moreover, equivalent circuit analysis and measurements inside a testing chamber suggest that calibrating the dcEF intensity with two recording electrodes can inaccurately capture the true EF magnitude in the targeted tissue when specific criteria are not met. Finally, we outline why microfluidic chambers are an effective and calibration-free approach of generating spatiotemporally uniform dcEF for DCS in vitro studies, facilitating accurate and fine-scale dcEF adjustments. We are convinced that improving the precision and addressing the limitations of current experimental platforms will substantially improve the reproducibility of in vitro experimental results. A better mechanistic understanding of dose–response relations will ultimately facilitate more effective non-invasive stimulation therapies in patients.

direct current electric field

electrotaxis

transcranial direct current stimulation

in vitro

finite element analysis

Author

Han Lu

University of Freiburg

Sebastian W. Shaner

University of Freiburg

Elisabeth Otte

University of Freiburg

Maria Asplund

University of Freiburg

Luleå University of Technology

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Electronics Material and Systems

Andreas Vlachos

University of Freiburg

Journal of Neuroscience Methods

0165-0270 (ISSN) 1872678x (eISSN)

Vol. 385 109761

Supercapacitive Polymer Electrodes for Directing Epithelial Repair (SPEEDER)

European Research Council (ERC) (759655-SPEEDER), 2022-06-01 -- 2023-07-31.

Subject Categories

Other Medical Engineering

Neurosciences

Biomedical Laboratory Science/Technology

DOI

10.1016/j.jneumeth.2022.109761

PubMed

36470469

More information

Latest update

1/12/2023