| Literature DB >> 21151376 |
Maria Cotelli1, Rosa Manenti, Sandra Rosini, Marco Calabria, Michela Brambilla, Patrizia Silvia Bisiacchi, Orazio Zanetti, Carlo Miniussi.
Abstract
Word-retrieval difficulties commonly occur in healthy aging. Recent studies report an improved ability to name pictures after the administration of high-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) in healthy younger adults and in patients with neurological disease. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of high-frequency rTMS applied to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) on picture naming in healthy older adults. High-frequency rTMS was applied to the left and right DLPFC during object and action naming in 13 healthy older adults. The naming latency for actions was shortened after stimulation of the left and right DLPFC compared to application of the sham stimulation. Stimulation was not observed to have any effect on correctness of naming. Our data demonstrate the involvement of the left and right DLPFC in a sample of healthy aging subjects during an action-naming task. The bilateral involvement of the DLPFC in these participants is discussed together with data on younger adults and on Alzheimer's patients.Entities:
Keywords: HAROLD; brain stimulation; naming
Year: 2010 PMID: 21151376 PMCID: PMC2996246 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2010.00151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Figure 1Time course of the experiment. The initial frame indicated the category of the next stimulus to the subject (“ACTION” or “OBJECT”). A sound (50 ms in duration) was presented at the onset of a centrally located fixation cross (1000 ms duration) that preceded the picture. The picture was present on the monitor for 1000 ms while trains of rTMS (500 ms, 20 Hz, 10% subthreshold) were delivered simultaneously with the picture presentation. Verbal reaction times were recorded with a microphone.
Neuropsychological data of the older adults who participated in Experiment 2.
| Raw scores | Cut-off | |
|---|---|---|
| MMSE | 29.5/30 | 24 |
| Raven-colored progressive matrices | 30.9/36 | 17.5 |
| Story recall | 15.2/28 | 7.5 |
| Rey–Osterrieth complex figure, recall | 14.6/36 | 9.46 |
| Digit span | 5.7 | 3.75 |
| Spatial span | 4.9 | 3.55 |
| Rey–Osterrieth complex figure, copy | 33.1/36 | 28.87 |
| Trail-making test A (s) | 40.2 | 93 |
| Trail-making test B (s) | 117.1 | 282 |
| Token test | 33.6/36 | 26.5 |
| Fluency, phonemic | 39.6 | 16 |
| Fluency, semantic | 45.3 | 24 |
| Oral object comprehension (BADA) | 39.9/40 | |
| Oral action comprehension (BADA) | 19.9/20 | |
| Written object comprehension (BADA) | 39.9/40 | |
| Written action comprehension (BADA) | 19.9/20 | |
| Oral object naming (BADA) | 29.2/30 | |
| Oral action naming (BADA) | 27.0/28 |
Figure 2Verbal reaction times (vRTs) following each stimulation condition, plotted separately for action and object stimuli. Asterisks indicate significant effects (p < 0.05). vRTs for actions were consistently faster during left and right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex than during sham stimulation. No significant differences were observed for object naming. Errors bars indicate mean standard error.