The effects of transcutaneous auricular vagal nerve stimulation on pupil size.

2021 
Abstract Objective Mechanisms of action and optimal stimulation parameters of transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) are currently unknown. Pupil size has gained attention as a promising biomarker of vagal activation in different studies on animal models. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of taVNS on pupil diameter in healthy subjects. Methods All subjects received taVNS at the left external acoustic meatus and control stimulation at the left earlobe during the same experimental session. Different intensities (0.5 mA; 1.0 mA; 2.0 mA; 3.0 mA) for both conditions were tested. Tonic pupil size was recorded in both eyes at baseline and during each stimulation using an infrared-automated pupillometer in three different illuminance conditions (scotopic, mesopic, photopic). Results In scotopic illuminance condition, a significant interaction between intensity and condition (real vs control) was found for the left eye. Post-Hoc analysis showed that during real taVNS at 2 mA, pupil size was significantly larger in comparison to baseline and 2 mA control stimulation. Conclusions Our study demonstrates that taVNS induces pupil dilation under specific illuminance conditions and at specific stimulation intensity. Significance The effects of taVNS are strictly dependent on technical aspects, such as stimulation parameters and experimental set-up.
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