| Literature DB >> 23519604 |
Lena Schmidt1, Kathrin S Utz, Lena Depper, Michaela Adams, Anna-Katharina Schaadt, Stefan Reinhart, Georg Kerkhoff.
Abstract
Tactile extinction is frequent, debilitating, and often persistent after brain damage. Currently, there is no treatment available for this disorder. In two previous case studies we showed an influence of galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) on tactile extinction. Here, we evaluated in further patients the immediate and lasting effects of GVS on tactile extinction. GVS is known to induce polarity-specific changes in cerebral excitability in the vestibular cortices and adjacent cortical areas. Tactile extinction was examined with the Quality Extinction Test (QET) where subjects have to discriminate six different tactile fabrics in bilateral, double simultaneous stimulations on their dorsum of hands with identical or different tactile fabrics. Twelve patients with stable left-sided tactile extinction after unilateral right-hemisphere lesions were divided into two groups. The GVS group (N = 6) performed the QET under six different experimental conditions (two Baselines, Sham-GVS, left-cathodal/right-anodal GVS, right-cathodal/left-anodal GVS, and a Follow-up test). The second group of patients with left-sided extinction (N = 6) performed the QET six times repetitively, but without receiving GVS (control group). Both right-cathodal/left-anodal as well as left-cathodal/right-anodal GVS (mean: 0.7 mA) improved tactile identification of identical and different stimuli in the experimental group. These results show a generic effect of GVS on tactile extinction, but not in a polarity-specific way. These observed effects persisted at follow-up. Sham-GVS had no significant effect on extinction. In the control group, no significant improvements were seen in the QET after the six measurements of the QET, thus ruling out test repetition effects. In conclusion, GVS improved bodily awareness permanently for the contralesional body side in patients with tactile extinction and thus offers a novel treatment option for these patients.Entities:
Keywords: awareness; body; brain recovery; extinction; rehabilitation; touch; vestibular
Year: 2013 PMID: 23519604 PMCID: PMC3602932 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1A schematic overview of the experimental design: the galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) conditions performed with the six experimental patients with extinction and the different time-points of measurement (TP) performed with the six control patients with extinction, respectively in six different sessions. Abbreviations: L-GVS, left-cathodal/right-anodal GVS; R-GVS, right-cathodal/left-anodal GVS; Sham, Sham stimulation with GVS but without the application of current; Follow-up, mean follow-up 2.8 months (84 days) after GVS.
Clinical and demographic data of 12 patients with left-sided tactile extinction due to a right-hemisphere brain lesion.
| Patient | Group | Age, sex | Handedness | Etiology | Lesion, Lesion age (months) | Motor deficits | Visual field | Digit cancelation omissions L/R max. (10/10) | Line bisection (20 cm, deviation in mm) | Neglect dyslexia | Visual neglect | Tactile extinction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-LA | GVS | 70, Male | Right-hander | ICB | Right fronto-parietal, 60.3 | Left hemiparesis | Normal | 0/0 | −3 | No | Yes | Yes |
| 2-RE | GVS | 45, Female | Right-hander | ICB | Right frontal, right temporal, 71.2 | Left hemiparesis | Left hemianopia, 10° | 1/1 | +2 | No | Yes | Yes |
| 3-KA | GVS | 66, Male | Right-hander | ICB | Right parietal, 6 | Left hemiparesis | Normal | 4/1 | +13 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 4-NI | GVS | 51, Female | Right-hander | MCI | Right fronto-parietal, 6 | Left hemiparesis | Normal | 5/2 | −10 | No | Yes | Yes |
| 5-SC | GVS | 72, Male | Right-hander | PCI | Right occipital, right thalamus, 25 | Normal | Left hemianopia | 4/1 | −12 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 6-KL | GVS | 47, Male | Left hander | Thalamus infarction | Right pulvinar, 2.3 | Normal | Left upper quadranopia | 2/1 | −7 | Yes | No | Yes |
| Mean | 58.3 (SD = 12.4) | 28.5 (SD = 30.2) | 3/1 | −2.8 | ||||||||
| 7-ME | Control | 59, Male | Right-hander | ICB | Right fronto-parietal, 8 | Left hemiparesis | Normal | 2/2 | −4 | Yes | No | Yes |
| 8-TA | Control | 47, Female | Right-hander | ICB | Right basal ganglia, 12 | Left hemiparesis | Normal | 2/1 | −2 | No | Yes | Yes |
| 9-CR | Control | 68, Male | Right-hander | PCI | Right thalamus and right occipital, 5 | Normal | Left hemianopia | 5/2 | +11 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 10-WI | Control | 45, Male | Right-hander | MCI | Right parietal, 15 | Left hemiparesis | Left lower quadranopia | 4/2 | +9 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 11-TU | Control | 47, Female | Right-hander | ICB | Right parietal, 5 | Left hemiparesis | Left lower quadranopia | 4/2 | +10 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 12-HA | Control | 25, Female | Right-hander | ICB | Right basal ganglia, 11 | Normal | Normal | 1/1 | +3 | No | No | Yes |
| Mean | 48.5 (SD = 14.6) | 9.3 (SD = 4.0) | 3/2 | +4.5 |
ICB, intracerebral bleeding; PCI, posterior cerebral artery infarction; MCI, middle cerebral artery infarction. Visual neglect: diagnosis based on conventional tests of digit cancelation, line bisection, and reading (for details, see Schmidt et al., .
Individual and mean threshold values (milliAmpere, mA) for subliminal GVS conditions for patients in the GVS group and mean number of side effects (%) according to the 34-items-questionnaire, averaged over the GVS group and separately for each GVS condition.
| Patient | L-GVS | R-GVS |
|---|---|---|
| 1-LA | 0.5 | 0.6 |
| 2-RE | 0.5 | 0.5 |
| 3-KA | 0.8 | 0.8 |
| 4-NI | 0.7 | 0.7 |
| 5-SC | 0.8 | 0.8 |
| 6-KL | 0.6 | 0.6 |
| Mean | 0.7 | 0.7 |
| Side effects (%) | 0 | 0 |
L-GVS, left-cathodal/right-anodal GVS; R-GVS, right-cathodal/left-anodal GVS.
Figure 2Mean (±standard error of the mean) extinction errors (%) for the right-hand in the Quality Extinction Test (QET) of the GVS group (. Note that apart from moderate variations in error rates no significant improvement was observed in the control group due to retesting in six subsequent sessions. Abbreviations: L-GVS, left-cathodal/right-anodal GVS; R-GVS, right-cathodal/left-anodal GVS; Sham, Sham stimulation with GVS but without the application of current; Follow-up, follow-up 2.8 months after GVS.
Figure 3Mean (±standard error of the mean) extinction errors (%) for the left hand in the Quality Extinction Test (QET) of the GVS group (. Note that apart from moderate variations in error rates no significant improvement was observed in the control group due to retesting in six subsequent sessions. Abbreviations: see legend of Figure 2.
Summary of paired comparisons between the different GVS conditions for the left hand of the GVS group, separately for different and identical tactile stimuli.
| Baseline 1 | Baseline 2 | Sham | L-GVS | R-GVS | Follow-up | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline 1 | – | n.s. | n.s. | ** | * | * |
| Baseline 2 | – | – | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. |
| Sham | – | – | – | * | n.s. | n.s. |
| L-GVS | – | – | – | – | n.s. | n.s. |
| R-GVS | – | – | – | – | – | n.s. |
| Follow-up | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Baseline 1 | – | n.s. | n.s. | ** | ** | ** |
| Baseline 2 | – | – | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. |
| Sham | – | – | – | ** | * | * |
| L-GVS | – | – | – | – | n.s. | n.s. |
| R-GVS | – | – | – | – | – | n.s. |
| Follow-up | – | – | – | – | – | – |
L-GVS, left-cathodal/right-anodal GVS; R-GVS, right-cathodal/left-anodal GVS; Sham, Sham stimulation with GVS but without the application of current; Follow-up, follow-up 2.8 months after GVS.
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Figure 4Individual extinction errors (in degrees, averaged over 18 trials) of the six patients with left-sided extinction (GVS group) in the Quality Extinction Test (QET) across the different experimental conditions for the left arm and in relation to lesion chronicity (months), separately for application of different tactile stimuli (A) and of identical tactile stimuli (B). Abbreviations: see legend of Figure 2. Mo, months. For patient codes and lesion chronicity, see Table 1.