| Literature DB >> 23966919 |
Sabrina Pitzalis1, Donatella Spinelli, Giuseppe Vallar, Francesco Di Russo.
Abstract
We studied the effects of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) in six right-brain-damaged patients with left unilateral spatial neglect (USN), using both standard clinical tests (reading, line, and letter cancelation, and line bisection), and electrophysiological measures (steady-state visual-evoked potentials, SSVEP). TENS was applied on left neck muscles for 15', and measures were recorded before, immediately after, and 60' after stimulation. Behavioral results showed that the stimulation temporarily improved the deficit in all patients. In cancelation tasks, omissions and performance asymmetries between the two hand-sides were reduced, as well as the rightward deviation in line bisection. Before TENS, SSVEP average latency to stimuli displayed in the left visual half-field [LVF (160 ms)] was remarkably longer than to stimuli shown in the right visual half-field [RVF (120 ms)]. Immediately after TENS, latency to LVF stimuli was 130 ms; 1 h after stimulation the effect of TENS faded, with latency returning to baseline. TENS similarly affected also the latency SSVEP of 12 healthy participants, and their line bisection performance, with effects smaller in size. The present study, first, replicates evidence concerning the positive behavioral effects of TENS on the manifestations of left USN in right-brain-damaged patients; second, it shows putatively related electrophysiological effects on the SSVEP latency. These behavioral and novel electrophysiological results are discussed in terms of specific directional effects of left somatosensory stimulation on egocentric coordinates, which in USN patients are displaced toward the side of the cerebral lesion. Showing that visual-evoked potentials latency is modulated by proprioceptive stimulation, we provide electrophysiological evidence to the effect that TENS may improve some manifestations of USN, with implications for its rehabilitation.Entities:
Keywords: TENS; neglect; neglect rehabilitation; proprioceptive stimulation; steady-state VEP
Year: 2013 PMID: 23966919 PMCID: PMC3746501 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Demographic and clinical data for the neglect patients.
| Patient # | Sex/age | TFO | Line canc | Lett canc | WJ | Sent read | Line bisect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M/69 | 132 | + | + | + | + | + |
| 2 | F/77 | 143 | + | + | + | + | + |
| 3 | F/68 | 101 | + | + | + | + | + |
| 4 | M/81 | 176 | − | + | + | − | + |
| 5 | M/68 | 162 | + | + | + | + | + |
| 6 | M/60 | 114 | + | + | − | + | + |
| Mean | 70.5 | 138 |
TFO, time from onset (days). Neglect tests: Line canc; line cancelation; Lett canc, letter cancelation; WJ, Wundt–Jastrow; Sent read, sentence reading; Line bisect, line bisection. The sign + identifies pathological performances according to standard normative values, while the sign − indicates performance above the cut-off (Pizzamiglio et al., .
Lesion localization in the six neglect patients (see .
| Patient # | Sites of lesions in the right hemisphere (RH) |
|---|---|
| 1 | Middle and posterior superior temporal gyrus, parahippocampal temporal gyrus, posterior half of cingulate gyrus |
| 2 | Inferior (supramarginal and angular gyri) and superior parietal lobule, superior temporal gyrus, mesial (supracalcarine) and lateral superior occipital region, occipital paraventricular area (areas 17 and 18 were totally spared, area 19 was mostly spared) |
| 3 | Superior temporal gyrus, precentral gyrus, and posterior sector of the frontal gyrus (primary and supplementary motor cortex), anterior cingulate cortex, pars opercularis of the frontal operculum |
| 4 | Precentral (primary sensory cortex), and frontal gyrus |
| 5 | Precentral and postcentral gyrus and posterior sector of frontal gyrus (primary sensory cortex, primary and supplementary motor cortex), superior temporal gyrus, posterior half of cingulate gyrus, inferior (supramarginal gyrus) parietal lobule, temporal pole, frontal operculum |
| 6 | Precentral and postcentral gyrus and posterior sector of the frontal gyrus (primary sensory cortex, primary and supplementary motor cortex), inferior (supramarginal gyrus) and superior parietal lobule, pars opercularis of the frontal operculum, superior temporal gyrus, posterior half of cingulate gyrus |
Figure 1Effect of TENS on neglect patients’ performances in sentence reading, line cancelation, and letter cancelation tests. Scores: percent of omitted left minus right targets (positive values indicated more omissions in the left side of space).
Figure 2Effect of TENS on line bisection performance of healthy subjects and neglect patients. Positive values indicate a rightward shift of the subjective midline.
Figure 3Steady-state visual-evoked potential data. Left panel: amplitudes as function of temporal frequencies for patients with spatial neglect and healthy subjects. For patients, the LVF responses are reported in PRE, POST, and POST60′ conditions. Thin lines without symbols represent the noise levels. Right panel: apparent latencies; as for amplitude, the data are reported in the three tested conditions.
Figure 4Asymmetry of the cortical responses to stimuli in the two hemifields in healthy subjects and neglect patients. Asymmetry is measured as difference between baseline RVF responses (PRE condition) and LVF responses measured in the three conditions (PRE, POST, and POST60′). The left panel shows the TENS effect on the amplitude at the peak temporal frequency (7.5 Hz). The right panel shows the TENS effect on apparent latency.