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NEUROLOGY 1990;40:666
© 1990 American Academy of Neurology

Localizing the site of magnetic brain stimulation in humans

Charles M. Epstein, MD, Daniel G. Schwartzberg, MD, Kent R. Davey, PhD and David B. Sudderth, MD

Departments of Neurology (Drs. Epstein and Sudderth) and Radiology (Dr. Schwartzberg), Emory University School of Medicine, and the School of Electrical Engineering (Dr. Davey), Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA.

Magnetic stimulation of the human brain is performed in clinical and research settings, but the site of activation has not been clearly localized in humans or other species. We used a set of magnetic stimulus coils with different field profiles to isolate movement of single digits at motor threshold and to calculate corresponding electric field strengths at various distances beneath the scalp. Two coils could produce the same electric field intensity at only 1 point. Thus, we could estimate the depth of stimulation by finding the intersection of the electric field plots, which were then superimposed on MRIs of the underlying brain. In each of 3 subjects the field plots intersected at the crown of a gyrus, in the region of the central sulcus, and near the level of the gray-white junction. This position and the electric field orientation support localization to layer VI of cerebral cortex.

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Charles M. Epstein, Department of Neurology, 1365 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30322.

Supported in part by a grant from the Emory-Georgia Tech Biomedical Research Foundation.

Received March 23, 1989. Accepted for publication in final form September 25, 1989.




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