Theta-Burst Stimulation
Cross-source consensus on Theta-Burst Stimulation from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
How it works
Comparisons
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation is a non-invasive method for modulating cortical excitability. — The MenoStim Trial: Study Protocol for a Randomised, Sham-Controlled, Double-Blinded, Pilot Clinical Trial Exploring the Neurophysiological, Cognitive, Mood and Biochemical Effects Associated with Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation During the Menopause Transition
- Theta-burst stimulation is a rapid rTMS variant designed to mimic natural theta-frequency firing patterns. — The MenoStim Trial: Study Protocol for a Randomised, Sham-Controlled, Double-Blinded, Pilot Clinical Trial Exploring the Neurophysiological, Cognitive, Mood and Biochemical Effects Associated with Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation During the Menopause Transition
- The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex is a primary stimulation target because it is involved in attention, working memory, and emotional regulation. — The MenoStim Trial: Study Protocol for a Randomised, Sham-Controlled, Double-Blinded, Pilot Clinical Trial Exploring the Neurophysiological, Cognitive, Mood and Biochemical Effects Associated with Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation During the Menopause Transition
- The article states that iTBS had not previously been studied for neurophysiological changes underlying the menopause transition. — The MenoStim Trial: Study Protocol for a Randomised, Sham-Controlled, Double-Blinded, Pilot Clinical Trial Exploring the Neurophysiological, Cognitive, Mood and Biochemical Effects Associated with Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation During the Menopause Transition
- Conventional rTMS is burdensome because protocols often require many sessions lasting 20 to 40 minutes over several weeks. — The MenoStim Trial: Study Protocol for a Randomised, Sham-Controlled, Double-Blinded, Pilot Clinical Trial Exploring the Neurophysiological, Cognitive, Mood and Biochemical Effects Associated with Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation During the Menopause Transition
- Intermittent theta-burst stimulation can deliver comparable cortical effects in much shorter sessions than conventional rTMS. — The MenoStim Trial: Study Protocol for a Randomised, Sham-Controlled, Double-Blinded, Pilot Clinical Trial Exploring the Neurophysiological, Cognitive, Mood and Biochemical Effects Associated with Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation During the Menopause Transition