| Literature DB >> 22615703 |
Abstract
The pharmacological treatment of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is often limited and accompanied by drug side effects. Thus alternative therapeutic strategies such as non-invasive brain stimulation are needed. Few studies have demonstrated that transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), a method of neuromodulation with consecutive robust excitability changes within the stimulated cortex area, is beneficial in AD. There is also evidence that tDCS enhances memory function in cognitive rehabilitation in depressive patients, Parkinson's disease, and stroke. tDCS improves working and visual recognition memory in humans and object-recognition learning in the elderly. AD's neurobiological mechanisms comprise changes in neuronal activity and the cerebral blood flow (CBF) caused by altered microvasculature, synaptic dysregulation from ß-amyloid peptide accumulation, altered neuromodulation via degenerated modulatory amine transmitter systems, altered brain oscillations, and changes in network connectivity. tDCS alters (i) neuronal activity and (ii) human CBF, (iii) has synaptic and non-synaptic after-effects (iv), can modify neurotransmitters polarity-dependently, (v) and alter oscillatory brain activity and (vi) functional connectivity patterns in the brain. It thus is reasonable to use tDCS as a therapeutic instrument in AD as it improves cognitive function in manner based on a disease mechanism. Moreover, it could prove valuable in other types of dementia. Future large-scale clinical and mechanism-oriented studies may enable us to identify its therapeutic validity in other types of demential disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; cerebral blood flow; frontotemporal dementia; memory loss; network connectivity; neurotransmitter modulation; synaptic and non-synaptic after-effects; transcranial direct current stimulation
Year: 2012 PMID: 22615703 PMCID: PMC3351674 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2012.00048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Clinical studies of tDCS in dementia.
| Study | Design | Age (years) | Disease diagnosis | MMSE | Medication | Parameters | Brain target | Effect | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boggio et al. ( | Cross over, sham controlled | 10 | 79 ± 9 | NINCDS, ADRADA | 17 ± 5 | AChEIs + others | Anodal/sham, 2 mA, 30 min | Left DLPFC | Improved visual recognition memory after atDCS |
| Boggio et al. ( | Sham controlled | 15 | 78 ± 7, 81 ± 10 | Adas-Cog, VRT, VAT, ADAS | 21 ± 3, 19 ± 3 | No data | Anodal, sham 2 mA, 30 min | TC bilateral | Improved visual recognition memory after atDCS |
| Ferrucci et al. ( | Cross over, sham controlled | 10 | 75 ± 7 | DSM-IV, NINCDS- ADRADA | 23 ± 2 | AchEI | Anodal/cathodal/sham, 1.5 mA, 15 min | Left/right TPC | Accuracy of the word-recognition memory increased after atDCS |
| Huey et al. ( | Double-blind, sham controlled | 10 | 61 (46−80) | Criteria Lund/Manchester 1994 MDRS | No data | AChEI + memantine | Active/sham, 2 mA, 20 min | FC | No improvement in verbal fluency after active tDCS |
AChEI, acetylcholine esterase inhibitors; Adas-Cog, Alzheimer’s disease assessment scale-cognitive sub scale; ADAS, Alzheimer’s disease assessment scale; DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; DSM- IV, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV (DSM-IV); FC, frontal cortex; MDRS, Mattis Dementia Rating Scale; MMSE, Mini Mental State Examination; NINCDS-ADRADA, National Institute of Neurological Communicative Disorders and Stroke-Alzheimer disease and Related Disorders Association; TC, temporal cortex; TPC, temporoparietal cortex; VAT, visual attention task; VRT, visual recognition task.
Studies of tDCS on cognitive functions.
| Study | Healthy subjects/age (age: mean [± standard deviation] or range) | Stimulation electrode | Polarity | Duration/intensity | Side effects | Effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andrews et al. ( | 10, 20−51 years | Left DLPFC | Anodal/sham | 10 min, 1 mA | No | Improvement in a WM task after atDCS |
| Boggio et al. ( | 18 Patients with PD, 45−71 years | M 1, left DLPC | Anodal/sham | 20 min, 1 or 2 mA | No | Improvement in WM of Parkinson’s disease patients after atDCS of the left DLPFC |
| de Vries et al. ( | 38, 23 ± 2 years | Broca’s area | Anodal/sham | 20 min, 1 mA | No | atDCS facilitates the acquisition of grammatical knowledge |
| Ferrucci et al. ( | 13, 75 ± 7 years | Cerebellum | Anodal/cathodal/sham | 15 min, 2 mA | Headache (one patient) | atDCS and ctDCS impairs practice-dependent proficiency in WM |
| Fiori et al. ( | 10 Subjects, 3 patients, 45−70 years | Wernicke’s area | Anodal/sham | 20 min, 1 mA | No | atDCS improved accuracy on the picture-naming task, both normal and patients had a shorter naming latency during atDCS |
| Flöel et al. ( | 19, 26 ± 3 years | Cp5 | Anodal/cathodal/sham | 20 min, 1 mA | No | Enhanced language learning by atDCS |
| Flöel et al. ( | 20, 62 ± 9 years | Right temporoparietal cortex | Anodal/sham | 20 min, 1 mA | No | Improved recall one week after learning with atDCS |
| Fregni et al. ( | 15, 19−22 years | M1, DLPFC | Anodal/cathodal/sham | 10min, 1mA | No | atDCS leads to enhancement of WM performance |
| Iyer et al. ( | 103, 19−70 years | F3 | Anodal/cathodal/sham | 20 min, 1 mA | Skin redness | Enhanced verbal fluency by atDCS |
| Javadi and Walsh ( | 32, 23 ± 2 years | Left DLPFC, M1 | Anodal/sham | 20 min, 1 mA | No | Enhancement of verbal memorization after atDCS or impairment of verbal memorization after ctDCS |
| Kincses et al. ( | 22, 28 ± 5 years | Fp3 | Anodal/cathodal | 10 min, 1 mA | No | atDCS enhanced probabilistic classification learning |
| Marshall et al. ( | 13, 19−28 years | F3 and F4 | Anodal/sham | Alternating 15 s off/15 s on over 30 min | No | atDCS during slow wave sleep improves verbal declarative memory |
| Marshall et al. ( | 12, 19−27 years | F3 and F4 | Anodal/cathodal | Alternating 15 s off/15 s on over 15 min | No | Impaired performance in WM task by anodal and ctDCS |
| Ohn et al. ( | 15, 27 ± 4 years | F3 | Anodal/sham | 30 min, 1 mA | No | atDCS enhanced performance in a WM task |
| Penolazzi et al. ( | 11, 27 ± 5 years | Right F4–C4, Left F3–C3, alternating between atDCS and ctDCS | Anodal/cathodal/sham | 20 min, 1 mA | No | Right atDCS and left ctDCS facilitated the recall of pleasant images regarding pleasant and neutral images |
| Ross et al. ( | 14, 55−69 years | Both anterior temporal lobes | Anodal/sham | 15 min, 1.5 mA | No | Numerical improvement in face naming after atDCS |
| Sparing et al. ( | 15, 27 ± 4 years | Cp5 | Anodal/cathodal/sham | 7 min, 2 mA | No | Improved picture naming by atDCS |
| Teo et al. ( | 12, 27 ± 9 years | F3 of the DLPFC | Anodal/sham | 20 min, 1 mA | No | Current strength may affect WM performance |
| Zaehle et al. ( | 10, 25 ± 2 years | Left DLPFC | Anodal/cathodal | 15 min, 1 mA | No | Increase in WM performance and amplified oscillatory power in theta and alpha bands after atDCS, interference with WM performance after ctDCS |
Abbreviations for electrode placement according to the 10–20 electrode system (Cp5, Cz, Fp3, C3/4: see Recommendations for the practice of clinical. Neurophysiology: guidelines of the International Federation Clinical Neurophysiology. .