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The History of Bioelectromagnetism
According to these fundamental approaches, TMS of the motor cortex gradually obtained interest. In
parallel, Anthony Tony Barker, professor at the University of Shefeld, Teaching Hospital’s Department
of Medical Physics and Clinical Engineering, and his co-workers stimulated successfully superfcial
nerves via magnetic felds by placing the stimulation coils on the human head and proposed a prototype
of a magnetic stimulator for peripheral nerve stimulation (Barker et al., 1985, 1987). Tey used 2 ms
duration pulses of time-varying magnetic felds to induce electric currents in the brain and recorded
for the frst time motor-evoked potentials obtained by median nerve magnetic stimulation with circular
single coils. As the frst clinical examinations, Barker’s group developed the frst TMS device which
produces cortical depolarization via magnetic stimulation in 1986 (Barker et al., 1986). Tis was the
beginning of magnetic brain stimulation in clinical examinations. Tese early researches used circular
single coils. Placing these circular single coils on the head and passing a current pulse through it. Eddy
currents were induced in the head, which stimulates broad areas of the brain. Since then, the TMS has
become a popular technique in the research of brain activity because it is easy to use as a non-invasive
tool (Barker, 1991; Ueno and Sekino, 2014; Ueno et al., 2019). TMS is a non-invasive and efective method
of cortical stimulation for medical diagnosis, in particular for studying the function of the human
brain. Tis method is based on the utilization of time-varying magnetic felds. Wassermann described
the basic principles of TMS as follows:
TMS uses the principle of inductance to get electrical energy across the scalp and skull without the
pain of direct percutaneous electrical stimulation. It involves placing a small coil of wire on the
scalp and passing a powerful and rapidly changing current through it. Tis produces a magnetic
feld that passes unimpeded and relatively painlessly through the tissues of the head. Te peak
strength of the magnetic feld is related to the magnitude of the current and the number of turns of
wire in the coil. Te magnetic feld, in turn, induces a much weaker electrical current in the brain.
Te strength of the induced current is a function of the rate of change of the magnetic feld, which
is determined by the rate of change of the current in the coil. In order to produce enough current to
excite neurons in the brain, the current passed through the coil must change within a few hundred
microseconds.
Wassermann (1998)
Depending on the parameters of stimulation such as frequency, duration and magnetic feld strength,
TMS is subdivided into two repetitive TMS (rTMS) treatments: low-frequency (1 Hz or less) rTMS and
high-frequency rTMS with frequencies from 5 to 20 Hz. Te former leads to reduction of excitability,
and the latter is considered to produce an excitatory efect. Te rTMS was frst produced by Cadwell
Laboratories in 1988. In 2008, rTMS was frst approved for clinical treatments of patients with major
depression by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Te FDA guidelines for rTMS were updated
in 2011 (Lin, 2016). Now, TMS has become a tool in basic neuroscience investigations, therapeutic and
rehabilitation applications such as depression, Parkinson’s disease (PD), Alzheimer’s disease, stroke,
pain, etc. (Kadosh, 2014). In 2017, Barker received “Te First International Brain Stimulation Award”
for his outstanding contributions in developing TMS at the Conference in Barcelona. Tis International
Conference award was given by publisher Elsevier.
2.5.3 Others
Afer constructing his frst large telescope in 1774, Frederick William Herschel (1738–1822), a German-
born British astronomer and composer, while measuring the thermal efects of sunlight with a prism
observed the infrared radiation from the spectrum of sunlight by means of a glass thermometer in 1800.
André Marie Ampère in 1835 confrmed that this infrared radiation has shorter wavelengths of elec
tromagnetic waves. Infrared radiation is ofen divided into three regions according to the ISO: 20473,
which specifes the following: near-infrared (NIR) with wavelengths of 0.78–3 μm, mid-infrared with