| Literature DB >> 24399952 |
Priyanka P Shah1, Jerzy P Szaflarski2, Jane Allendorfer2, Roy H Hamilton1.
Abstract
Stroke victims tend to prioritize speaking, writing, and walking as the three most important rehabilitation goals. Of note is that two of these goals involve communication. This underscores the significance of developing successful approaches to aphasia treatment for the several hundred thousand new aphasia patients each year and over 1 million stroke survivors with chronic aphasia in the U.S. alone. After several years of growth as a research tool, non-invasive brain stimulation (NBS) is gradually entering the arena of clinical aphasiology. In this review, we first examine the current state of knowledge of post-stroke language recovery including the contributions from the dominant and non-dominant hemispheres. Next, we briefly discuss the methods and the physiologic basis of the use of inhibitory and excitatory repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) as research tools in patients who experience post-stroke aphasia. Finally, we provide a critical review of the most influential evidence behind the potential use of these two brain stimulation methods as clinical rehabilitative tools.Entities:
Keywords: TMS; aphasia; fMRI; rTMS; rehabilitation; tDCS
Year: 2013 PMID: 24399952 PMCID: PMC3870921 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Summary of non-invasive brain stimulation intervention studies for post-stroke aphasia.
| Naeser et al., | 1 | Chronic | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 days 20 min/day Optimal site finding CPAP | 3, 6, 2.4 years | Right PTr (5 sites: Motor mouth area, and 4 subregions within Broca's area) | Picture naming, BDAE, BNT | Phrase length, auditory comprehension and BNT at 3 and 6 months post-TMS |
| Cotelli et al., | 3 | Chronic | 20 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 or 20 days 25 min/day 25 min of SLT | About 1, 3, 6, 11 | Left dlPFC | AAT, BADA, picture naming, verbal fluency and reasoning | Picture naming accuracy; persistent benefit present 48 weeks after treatment |
| Hamilton et al., | 1 | Chronic | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 days 20 min/day Optimal site finding | 2, 6, 10 | Right PTr (sites: POp, dpPTr, vpPTr, aPTr, PO, Motor mouth area) | WAB, BDAE-Cookie theft, picture naming | Naming and spontaneous speech; improvement in picture description sustained at 2, 6 and 10 months |
| Barwood et al., | 7 | Chronic | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 days 20 min/day | 2, 8 | Right PTr | BNT, BDAE, picture naming | Naming accuracy and latency, generalized speech output, and auditory speech comprehension; effects sustained up to 8 months |
| Martin et al., | 2 | Chronic | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 days 20 min/day Optimal site finding fMRI: changes in activation patterns | 2, 6, 16, 43 | Right PTr (4 sites: POp, aPTr, pPTr, Motor mouth area) | BNT, BDAE—Cookie theft, picture naming | Picture naming and phrase length in one patient (responder; best response site right pPTr); No improvement in the other patient (non-responder; best response site right aPTR) |
| Naeser et al., | 4 | Chronic | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 days 20 min/day | 2, 8 | Right PTr | BNT, BDAE, picture naming | Picture naming at both 2 and 8 months in 3 patients |
| Kakuda et al., | 4 | Chronic | 10 min of 6 Hz followed by 20 min of 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 11 days 2 sessions/day (except on 1st and last day) 60 min of SLT | − | Right IFG (F8) | SLTA, J-WAB | (greatest) repetition and naming; 4 patients showed improvement in different categories including naming, repetition, writing, auditory and visual comprehension and speech; none showed deterioration |
| Barwood et al., | 6 real 6 sham | Chronic | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 days 20 min/day | 2 | Right PTr | BNT, BDAE, picture naming | Naming, aspects of expressive language and auditory comprehension |
| Medina et al., | 5 real 5 sham (crossed-over to real after 2 months) | Chronic | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 days 20 min/day Cross-over Optimal site finding | 2 | Right IFG (sites: POp, dpPTr, vpPTr, aPTr, PO, Motor mouth area) | BDAE, BNT, narrative speech production | Fluency at 2 months after rTMS, specifically in discourse productivity; no benefit in sentence complexity, grammatical accuracy or lexical selection; for 9/10 patients, the optimal site was right PTr |
| Kindler et al., | 18 | Sub-acute and Chronic | cTBS (3 pulses at 30 Hz) 2 days—Sham/real Cross-over 44 s/day | − | Right PTr | Timed picture naming, alertness task | Naming and reaction time after TBS vs. sham; no differences observed in arousal; patients in sub-acute phase were best responders |
| Waldowski et al., | 13 real 13 sham | Sub-acute | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 15 days 30 min/day 45 min SLT | 3.5 | Right PTr and right POp | ASRS, BDAE, picture naming7 | Aphasia severity (ASRS) in real group compared to the sham 15-weeks after treatment; naming accuracy did not differ between groups but reaction time was slightly faster in the real group after treatment; real subgroup with lesions involving frontal area showed slower reaction times |
| Barwood et al., | 6 real 6 sham | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 days 20 min/day | 2, 8, 12 | Right PTr | Naming, expressive language and auditory comprehension up to 12 months in the real group compared to sham | ||
| Barwood et al., | 6 real 6 sham | Chronic | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 days 20 min/day N400 ERP | 2 | Right PTr | BNT, BDAE, picture naming, SJT | (Differences in) mean and peak amplitudes and area under the curve measures of N400 ERP component between real and sham group at 2 months |
| Weiduschat et al., | 6 real 4 ctrls | Sub-acute | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 8–10 days 20 min/day PET SLT | − | Right PTr or Vertex | AAT | AAT; activation shift toward right hemisphere in control group, absent in intervention group; laterality shift and clinical improvement were not related |
| Szaflarski et al., | 8 | Chronic | fMRI-guided iTBS (3 pulses at 50 Hz) 10 days 200 s/day 80% AMT LI | − | Left PTr | BNT, SFT, COWAT, PPVT, CAL, BDAE CompId | SFT; activation shifts to the affected left hemisphere; self-reports of improved communicative ability (tendency) |
| Allendorfer et al., | 8 | Chronic | fMRI-guided iTBS (3 pulses at 50 Hz) 10 days 200 s/day 80% AMT DTI—FA | − | Left PTr | BNT, SFT, COWAT, PPVT, CAL, BDAE CompId | SFT; higher DTI-FA values in the left fronto-temporo-parietal areas |
| Abo et al., | 24 | Chronic | fMRI (right or left) and aphasia type (STG or IFG)-guided 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 days 40 min/day 60 min of SLT | − | Fluent: Right STG (CP6 | SLTA, J-WAB | Auditory and reading comprehension, and repetition in non-fluent aphasia patients; improvement in spontaneous speech in fluent aphasia patients |
| Thiel et al., | 13 real 11 sham | Sub-acute | 1 Hz rTMS 90% RMT 10 days 20 min/day PET 45 min of SLT | − | Right PTr or Vertex | AAT | Global AAT and naming subtests; larger activation index in the left hemisphere in rTMS group post-treatment compared to the sham group |
| Monti et al., | 4 a-tDCS 4 c-tDCS | Chronic | a-tDCS and c-tDCS 2 mA 10 min Reference on right shoulder Cross-over | − | Left fronto-temporal (crossing point between T3-Fz and F7-Cz) | Picture naming task | Picture naming accuracy after c-tDCS whereas a-tDCS and sham induced no changes |
| Baker et al., | 10 | Chronic | a-tDCS and sham 1 mA 5 days/condition 20 min/day Reference on right shoulder Cross-over Online anomia treatment4 | − | fMRI-guided left frontal areas | Picture naming task, WAB-R, ABA-2 | Naming accuracy after a-tDCS compared to sham; effects persisted at least 1-week post-treatment |
| Fiori et al., | 3 | Chronic | a-tDCS and sham 1 mA 20 min/day 5 days/condition Online language training | − | Left Wernicke's | Picture naming task, BADA | Picture naming accuracy with a-tDCS and sham; shorter naming latencies during a-tDCS compared to sham. Accuracy and RT were better at 1 and 3 weeks after a-tDCS |
| Fridriksson et al., | 8 | Chronic with posterior lesions | a-tDCS and sham 1 mA 5 days/condition 20 min/day Reference on right forehead Cross-over Online anomia treatment4 | − | fMRI-guided (left) perilesional areas | Picture naming task | (Reduction in) reaction times during naming after a-tDCS compared to sham; effects persisted at least 3-weeks |
| Floel et al., | 12 | Chronic | a-tDCS, c-tDCS, and sham 1 mA 20 min/day 3 days/condition Cross-over Reference in contralateral supraorbital Online anomia training | − | Right temporo-parietal | AAT; picture naming | Picture naming accuracy after all stimulation conditions observed with anomia training; sustained benefits were found 2-weeks after a-tDCS as compared to sham and c-tDCS |
| You et al., | 7 a-tDCS 7 c-tDCS 7 sham | Sub-acute | a-tDCS on left or c-tDCS on right or sham 2 mA 10 days 30 min Reference on contralateral supraorbital Online SLT | − | Left and Right Wernicke's (STG) | K-WAB | Auditory verbal comprehension after right c-tDCS compared to left a-tDCS and sham; overall improvement in AQ and spontaneous speech also observed across groups |
| Kang et al., | 10 | Chronic | c-tDCS and sham 2 mA 20 min 5 days/condition Cross-over Reference on left supraorbital Online word-retrieval training | − | Right Broca's homolog | Korean-BNT | Naming accuracy at 1 h after c-tDCS but no changes in sham tDCS |
| Marangolo et al., | 12 | Chronic | a-tDCS and sham 1 mA 20 min 10 day/condition Reference on right frontopolar Cross-over Online conversational therapy | 1 | Left Broca's (F4) | BADA, token test, ecological measure, attention and memory tests | Informative speech–increase in content-units, verb and sentence production– after a-tDCS on left Broca's area; effects sustained up to 3 months |
CPAP, Continuous Positive Airway Pressure; AAT, Aachen Aphasia Test; ABA-2, Apraxia Battery for Adults—Second Edition; AMT, Active Motor Threshold; ASRS, Aphasia Severity Rating Scale; a-tDCS, anodal transcranial direct current stimulation; BADA, Battery for the Analysis of Aphasic Disorders; BDAE, Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination; BNT, Boston Naming Test; CAL, Communicative Abilities Log; CompId, Complex Ideation subtest; COWAT, Controlled Oral Word Association Test; cTBS, Continuous Theta Burst Stimulation (inhibitory rTMS protocol); c-tDCS, cathodal transcranial direct current stimulation; ctrl, control; dlPFC, Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; DTI-FA, Diffusion Tensor Imaging—Fractional Anisotropy; EEG, Electroencephalogram; FU, Follow-up in months after treatment; IFG, Inferior frontal gyrus; iTBS, intermittent theta burst stimulation; J-WAB, Japanese-Western Aphasia Battery; K-WAB, Korean-Western Aphasia Battery; LI, Lateralization index; mA, milliamperes (unit of current); PET, Positron emission tomography; PPVT, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test; PTr, Pars triangularis (Anterior portion of Broca's area); RMT, Resting Motor Threshold; SFT, Semantic Fluency Test; SJT, Word, picture semantic judgment task; SLT, Speech language therapy; SLTA, Standard Language Test of Aphasia; STG, Superior temporal gyrus; WAB-R, Western Aphasia Battery—Revised.
EEG International 10–20 system.
Figure 1Optimal site-finding among right hemispheric homolog areas and rTMS in a left hemisphere stroke patient with aphasia. (A) Among several right hemispheric sites, an optimal site is identified on the subject's high-resolution anatomical scan (red square); optimal site is the one that exhibits better transient language improvement compared to other sites. Most patients respond optimally to the right inferior pars triangularis (InfPTr) site. (B) A 3-dimensional reconstruction of the subject's high resolution anatomical scan with the 6 sites-of-interest highlighted in different colors in the right hemisphere. Optimal site for this patient is the ventral posterior (inferior) pars triangularis (PTr).
Figure 2Neuronavigated rTMS in a left hemisphere stroke patient with aphasia. (A) Language fMRI activation in left perilesional frontal area is identified on the subject's high-resolution anatomical scan as the stimulation target (green square), and a trajectory is set for optimal stimulation (green arrow). (B) A 3-dimensional reconstruction of the subject's high-resolution anatomical scan allows for visualization of the optimal coil placement (green coil) for iTBS.