| Literature DB >> 25900145 |
Jianwei Cao1, Bilal Khan1, Nathan Hervey1, Fenghua Tian1, Mauricio R Delgado2, Nancy J Clegg3, Linsley Smith3, Heather Roberts3, Kirsten Tulchin-Francis3, Angela Shierk3, Laura Shagman4, Duncan MacFarlane4, Hanli Liu1, George Alexandrakis1.
Abstract
Sensorimotor cortex plasticity induced by constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT) in six children (10.2±2.1 years old) with hemiplegic cerebral palsy was assessed by functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). The activation laterality index and time-to-peak/duration during a finger-tapping task and the resting-state functional connectivity were quantified before, immediately after, and 6 months after CIMT. These fNIRS-based metrics were used to help explain changes in clinical scores of manual performance obtained concurrently with imaging time points. Five age-matched healthy children (9.8±1.3 years old) were also imaged to provide comparative activation metrics for normal controls. Interestingly, the activation time-to-peak/duration for all sensorimotor centers displayed significant normalization immediately after CIMT that persisted 6 months later. In contrast to this improved localized activation response, the laterality index and resting-state connectivity metrics that depended on communication between sensorimotor centers improved immediately after CIMT, but relapsed 6 months later. In addition, for the subjects measured in this work, there was either a trade-off between improving unimanual versus bimanual performance when sensorimotor activation patterns normalized after CIMT, or an improvement occurred in both unimanual and bimanual performance but at the cost of very abnormal plastic changes in sensorimotor activity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25900145 PMCID: PMC4479242 DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.20.4.046009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Opt ISSN: 1083-3668 Impact factor: 3.170