Potential employment of transcranial magnetic stimulation as a beneficial intervention in children with amblyopia: a brief overview

Amblyopia is an early functional imbalance between each eye and the brain that may result in visual cortex inhibition. Current conservative treatments involve altering the input from the ‘good eye’, for example, using patching or biochemical penalization. Direct brain stimulation to the amblyopic co...

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Main Authors: Indra Tri Mahayana, Dhimas Hari Sakti, Natalia Christina Angsana
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Gadjah Mada 2020-10-01
Series:Journal of the Medical Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/bik/article/view/50766
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spelling doaj-dd674a5cd4df475e884f985ce79a1ce72021-09-27T06:15:43ZengUniversitas Gadjah MadaJournal of the Medical Sciences0126-13122356-39312020-10-0152410.19106/JMedSci00520420200928531Potential employment of transcranial magnetic stimulation as a beneficial intervention in children with amblyopia: a brief overviewIndra Tri Mahayana0Dhimas Hari Sakti1Natalia Christina Angsana2Department of Ophthalmology, Faculty of Medicine Public Health and Nursing, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta, IndonesiaDepartment of Ophthalmology, Faculty of Medicine Public Health and Nursing, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta, IndonesiaFaculty of Medicine, Public Health and Nursing, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta, IndonesiaAmblyopia is an early functional imbalance between each eye and the brain that may result in visual cortex inhibition. Current conservative treatments involve altering the input from the ‘good eye’, for example, using patching or biochemical penalization. Direct brain stimulation to the amblyopic cortex might improve the condition. This paper aimed to systematically review the published scientific literature regarding the use of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) as a potential method for treatment in the amblyopic visual cortex. This study was a systematic review of the published scientific literature related to theTMS for the treatment of amblyopia that was performed using “TMS, amblyopia” as keywords. However, only three research papers were found and included in the literature review. A study showed that repetitive TMS of the visual cortex can temporarily improve contrast sensitivity in the amblyopic visual cortex. Another study used continuous thetaburst stimulation (cTBS) delivered to the visual cortex while patients viewed a high contrast stimulus with their non-amblyopic eye. It was found that daily theta burst TMS stimulation improved amblyopic eye contrast sensitivity in five adult volunteers. The TMS also increased median visual acuity in the patient with amblyopia after stimulation with no significant changes in the placebo group.Protocol employing repetitive administration of TMS might result in beneficial effects in amblyopia treatment. TMS works in brain dynamics and experience-dependent plasticity, all of which could be important in investigating and treating amblyopia.https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/bik/article/view/50766amblyopiatranscranial magnetic stimulationpediatric ophthalmologyvisual cortexrefractive correction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Indra Tri Mahayana
Dhimas Hari Sakti
Natalia Christina Angsana
spellingShingle Indra Tri Mahayana
Dhimas Hari Sakti
Natalia Christina Angsana
Potential employment of transcranial magnetic stimulation as a beneficial intervention in children with amblyopia: a brief overview
Journal of the Medical Sciences
amblyopia
transcranial magnetic stimulation
pediatric ophthalmology
visual cortex
refractive correction
author_facet Indra Tri Mahayana
Dhimas Hari Sakti
Natalia Christina Angsana
author_sort Indra Tri Mahayana
title Potential employment of transcranial magnetic stimulation as a beneficial intervention in children with amblyopia: a brief overview
title_short Potential employment of transcranial magnetic stimulation as a beneficial intervention in children with amblyopia: a brief overview
title_full Potential employment of transcranial magnetic stimulation as a beneficial intervention in children with amblyopia: a brief overview
title_fullStr Potential employment of transcranial magnetic stimulation as a beneficial intervention in children with amblyopia: a brief overview
title_full_unstemmed Potential employment of transcranial magnetic stimulation as a beneficial intervention in children with amblyopia: a brief overview
title_sort potential employment of transcranial magnetic stimulation as a beneficial intervention in children with amblyopia: a brief overview
publisher Universitas Gadjah Mada
series Journal of the Medical Sciences
issn 0126-1312
2356-3931
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Amblyopia is an early functional imbalance between each eye and the brain that may result in visual cortex inhibition. Current conservative treatments involve altering the input from the ‘good eye’, for example, using patching or biochemical penalization. Direct brain stimulation to the amblyopic cortex might improve the condition. This paper aimed to systematically review the published scientific literature regarding the use of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) as a potential method for treatment in the amblyopic visual cortex. This study was a systematic review of the published scientific literature related to theTMS for the treatment of amblyopia that was performed using “TMS, amblyopia” as keywords. However, only three research papers were found and included in the literature review. A study showed that repetitive TMS of the visual cortex can temporarily improve contrast sensitivity in the amblyopic visual cortex. Another study used continuous thetaburst stimulation (cTBS) delivered to the visual cortex while patients viewed a high contrast stimulus with their non-amblyopic eye. It was found that daily theta burst TMS stimulation improved amblyopic eye contrast sensitivity in five adult volunteers. The TMS also increased median visual acuity in the patient with amblyopia after stimulation with no significant changes in the placebo group.Protocol employing repetitive administration of TMS might result in beneficial effects in amblyopia treatment. TMS works in brain dynamics and experience-dependent plasticity, all of which could be important in investigating and treating amblyopia.
topic amblyopia
transcranial magnetic stimulation
pediatric ophthalmology
visual cortex
refractive correction
url https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/bik/article/view/50766
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