Slow Steady Waves Keep Brain
Humming
The Rhythmic Waves Are Linked to State ofConsciousness
By TamaraBhandari , Washington University
of St Louis School of Medicine
The Rhythmic Waves Are Linked to State of
By Tamara
March 29, 2018 -- Very slow brain waves, long considered an
artifact of brain scanning techniques, may be more important than anyone had
realized. Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have found that
very slow waves are directly linked to state of consciousness and may be
involved in coordinating activity across distant brain regions.
If you keep a close eye on an MRI scan of the brain, you’ll
see a wave pass through the entire brain like a heartbeat once every few
seconds. This ultra-slow rhythm was recognized decades ago, but no one quite
knew what to make of it. MRI data are inherently noisy, so most researchers
simply ignored the ultra-slow waves.
But by studying electrical activity in mouse brains,
researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have found that the ultra-slow
waves are anything but noise. They are more like waves in the sea, with
everything the brain does taking place in boats upon that sea. Research to date
has been focused on the goings-on inside the boats, without much thought for
the sea itself. But the new information suggests that the waves play a central
role in how the complex brain coordinates itself and that the waves are
directly linked to consciousness.
“Your brain has 100 billion neurons or so, and they have to
be coordinated,” said senior author Marcus Raichle, MD, the Alan A. and Edith
L. Wolff Distinguished Professor of Medicine and a professor of radiology at
Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology at the School of Medicine .
“These slowly varying signals in the brain are a way to get a very large-scale
coordination of the activities in all the diverse areas of the brain. When the
wave goes up, areas become more excitable; when it goes down, they become less
so.”
The study is published March 29 in the journal Neuron.
In the early 2000s, Raichle and others discovered patterns
of brain activity in people as they lay quietly in MRI machines, letting their
minds wander. These so-called resting-state networks challenged the assumption
that the brain quiets itself when it’s not actively engaged in a task. Now we
know that even when you feel like you’re doing nothing, your brain is still
humming along, burning almost as much energy daydreaming as solving a tough
math problem.
Using resting-state networks, other researchers started
searching for – and finding – brain areas that behaved differently in healthy
people than in people with brain diseases such as schizophrenia and
Alzheimer’s. But even as resting-state MRI data provided new insights into
neuropsychiatric disorders, they also consistently showed waves of activity spreading
with a slow regularity throughout the brain, independently of the disease under
study. Similar waves were seen on brain scans of monkeys and rodents.
Some researchers thought that these ultra-slow waves were no
more than an artifact of the MRI technique itself. MRI gauges brain activity
indirectly by measuring the flow of oxygen-rich blood over a period of seconds,
a very long timescale for an organ that sends messages at one-tenth to
one-hundredth of a second. Rather than a genuinely slow process, the reasoning
went, the waves could be the sum of many rapid electrical signals over a
relatively long time.
First author Anish Mitra, PhD, and Andrew Kraft, PhD – both
MD/PhD students at Washington
University – and
colleagues decided to approach the mystery of the ultra-slow waves using two
techniques that directly measure electrical activity in mice brains. In one,
they measured such activity on the cellular level. In the other, they measured
electrical activity layer by layer along the outer surface of the brain.
They found that the waves were no artifact: Ultra-slow waves
were seen regardless of the technique, and they were not the sum of all the
faster electrical activity in the brain.
Instead, the researchers found that the ultra-slow waves
spontaneously started in a deep layer of mice’s brains and spread in a
predictable trajectory. As the waves passed through each area of the brain,
they enhanced the electrical activity there. Neurons fired more
enthusiastically when a wave was in the vicinity.
Moreover, the ultra-slow waves persisted when the mice were
put under general anesthesia, but with the direction of the waves reversed.
“There is a very slow process that moves through the brain
to create temporary windows of opportunity for long-distance signaling,” Mitra
said. “The way these ultra-slow waves move through the cortex is correlated
with enormous changes in behavior, such as the difference between conscious and
unconscious states.”
The fact that the waves’ trajectory changed so dramatically
with state of consciousness suggests that ultra-slow waves could be fundamental
to how the brain functions. If brain areas are thought of as boats bobbing
about on a slow-wave sea, the choppiness and direction of the sea surely
influences how easily a message can be passed from one boat to another, and how
hard it is for two boats to coordinate their activity.
The researchers now are studying whether abnormalities in
the trajectory of such ultra-slow waves could explain some of the differences
seen on MRI scans between healthy people and people with neuropsychiatric
conditions such as dementia and depression.
“If you look at the brain of someone with schizophrenia, you
don’t see a big lesion, but something is not right in how the whole beautiful
machinery of the brain is organized,” said Raichle, who is also a professor of
biomedical engineering, of neurology, of neuroscience and of psychological and
brain sciences. “What we’ve found here could help us figure out what is going
wrong. These very slow waves are unique, often overlooked and utterly central
to how the brain is organized. That’s the bottom line.”
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