A non-invasive technique delivering mild electrical pulses to the outer ear — primarily the cymba conchae — to stimulate vagal nerve fibers without surgery. It is being studied as a potential treatment for inflammatory, neurological, and autonomic conditions.
taVNS accesses the vagal pathway through the outer ear, where the auricular branch of the vagus nerve (ABVN) surfaces in the skin — specifically in the cymba conchae, the only auricular region with consistent vagal innervation across all individuals. An electrode placed there delivers electrical pulses that travel along the ABVN to the superior vagal ganglion and to the brainstem's nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS), the primary relay point for vagal sensory input, and from there to broader circuits involved in autonomic and immune regulation.
This makes taVNS distinct from many neck- or wrist-based neuromodulation devices: it targets auricular regions with direct vagal innervation, rather than relying primarily on indirect stimulation of skin, muscle, or vascular pathways.
Stimulation parameters — frequency, intensity, duration — influence which circuits are engaged and to what degree.
Is the Cymba Conchae the Best Place to Stimulate the Vagus Nerve?