| Literature DB >> 25295004 |
Marcus Meinzer1, Robert Lindenberg2, Mira M Sieg2, Laura Nachtigall2, Lena Ulm1, Agnes Flöel3.
Abstract
Language facilitation by transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in healthy individuals has generated hope that tDCS may also allow improving language impairment after stroke (aphasia). However, current stimulation protocols have yielded variable results and may require identification of residual language cortex using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which complicates incorporation into clinical practice. Based on previous behavioral studies that demonstrated improved language processing by motor system pre-activation, the present study assessed whether tDCS administered to the primary motor cortex (M1) can enhance language functions. This proof-of-concept study employed a sham-tDCS controlled, cross-over, within-subject design and assessed the impact of unilateral excitatory (anodal) and bihemispheric (dual) tDCS in 18 healthy older adults during semantic word-retrieval and motor speech tasks. Simultaneous fMRI scrutinized the neural mechanisms underlying tDCS effects. Both active tDCS conditions significantly improved word-retrieval compared to sham-tDCS. The direct comparison of activity elicited by word-retrieval vs. motor-speech trials revealed bilateral frontal activity increases during both anodal- and dual-tDCS compared to sham-tDCS. This effect was driven by more pronounced deactivation of frontal regions during the motor-speech task, while activity during word-retrieval trials was unaffected by the stimulation. No effects were found in M1 and secondary motor regions. Our results show that tDCS administered to M1 can improve word-retrieval in healthy individuals, thereby providing a rationale to explore whether M1-tDCS may offer a novel approach to improve language functions in aphasia. Functional magnetic resonance imaging revealed neural facilitation specifically during motor speech trials, which may have reduced switching costs between the overlapping neural systems for lexical retrieval and speech processing, thereby resulting in improved performance.Entities:
Keywords: aging; functional magnetic resonance imaging; language; motor; transcranial direct current stimulation
Year: 2014 PMID: 25295004 PMCID: PMC4172053 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2014.00253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Figure 1(A) Illustrates the design of the present study. tDCS was ramped up prior to the start of the resting-state scan during all stimulation conditions. During sham-tDCS the current was ramped down after 30 s (before scanning commenced). During both active stimulation conditions (anodal- and dual-tDCS), it continued until after the end of the word-retrieval task (red square; only data acquired during the word-retrieval task is reported). (B) Surface rendering illustrates the location of the electrodes during the two active stimulation conditions on the scalp: upper row shows anodal-tDCS montage; lower row shows dual-tDCS montage. Please note, the larger size of the reference electrode (cathode) during anodal-tDCS renders the stimulation over the supraorbital cortex functionally ineffective. R = right hemisphere, L = left hemisphere. C = Cathode, A = Anode. (C) Surface rendering of activity patterns elicited by semantic word-retrieval vs. motor speech trials during the three stimulation conditions. Overall, as in previous studies that used the same task, this contrast elicited mainly activity in bilateral lateral frontal and medial frontal and premotor regions. Right column = Left hemisphere, Left column = Right hemisphere. All contrasts were thresholded at p < 0.05, family-wise-error corrected at voxel and cluster levels.
Demographic characteristics of the participants and details of the neuropsychological assessment (mean and standard deviation, raw data).
| Mean ± SD | Range | |
|---|---|---|
| 68.38 ± 5.15 | 61–77 | |
| 15.88 ± 4.74 | 11–19 | |
| 9/9 | ||
| 29.44 ± 0.62 | 28–30 | |
| (# examplars produced in one minute) | ||
| Semantic fluency | 25.61 ± 9.41 | 14–31 |
| Phonemic fluency | 16.39 ± 4.37 | 12–25 |
| 14.67 ± 0.59 | 13–15 | |
| Learning success (sum score runs 1–3) | 20.44 ± 3.55 | 16–27 |
| Delayed recall | 7.89 ± 1.84 | 6–10 |
| Copy | 10.83 ± 0.70 | 8–11 |
| Delayed recall | 10.7 ± 2.62 | 7–14 |
| (time to completion, s) | 39.94 ± 7.07 | 31–49 |
| 74.00 ± 20.86 | 42–103 |
Figure 2Illustrates semantic word-retrieval performance during the three stimulation conditions (anodal-, sham- and dual-tDCS). Both active stimulation conditions improved performance as compared to sham; no significant differences were found between anodal- and dual-tDCS. Data show mean ± SEM # of errors (max. 60), * p < 0.05.
Figure 3Results of the upper panel depicts activity elicited by the semantic word-retrieval task as compared to motor speech trials (complex contrast) during the three stimulation conditions (anodal-, sham-, dual-tDCS). Lower panels show separate comparisons of activity elicited by (B) word-retrieval and (C) motor speech trials with the implicit baseline. Data show mean ± SEM, *p < 0.05 FDR-corrected corrected for multiple comparisons.