| Literature DB >> 26379560 |
Simarjot K Dhaliwal1, Benjamin P Meek1, Mandana M Modirrousta1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a common cause of physical, psychological, and cognitive impairment, but many current treatments for TBI are ineffective or produce adverse side effects. Non-invasive methods of brain stimulation could help ameliorate some common trauma-induced symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: altered states of consciousness; depression; non-invasive brain stimulation; rehabilitation; repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; trancranial direct current stimulation; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2015 PMID: 26379560 PMCID: PMC4549551 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2015.00119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram outlining search methodology.
Summarized details of reviewed rTMS articles.
| Study | Patient descriptions | Brain damage | Target symptoms | Stimulation location | Stimulation parameters | # Sessions | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bonni et al. ( | 20 y.o. male; severe TBI 2 years prior | Cortical lesion in right temporal cortex; small cortico–subcortical lesions in periventricular white matter | Hemispatial neglect | Left posterior parietal cortex | 50 Hz cTBS at 80% active MT | 20 (2/day) | Marked cognitive improvement in BIT |
| Cavinato et al. ( | 31 y.o. male; severe TBI 8 months prior | Diffuse hematoma in corpus callosum; mass effect over fourth ventricle | Altered consciousness | Left DLPFC | 20 Hz at 90% MT | 4 prior to seizure | Seizure |
| Cosentino et al. ( | 63 y.o. male; TBI of unspecified severity 10 months prior | Structural lesion of right temporal lobe | Musical hallucination | Right temporal area | 1 Hz at 90% MT using a focal coil | 10 | Disappearance following Tx, reappearance in reduced state 4 months post-Tx |
| Fitzgerald et al. ( | 41 y.o. female; mild TBI 14 years prior | None | Depression | DLPFC | Active sequential stimulation at 110% MT: low: 1 Hz; high: 10 Hz | 20 | Response (50% MADRS reduction) |
| George et al. ( | Suicidal ideation | Left prefrontal cortex | 10 Hz at 110% MT | 9 (3/day × 3 days) | Drop in SSI scores not significantly different between groups; trend toward more rapid response in active group | ||
| Giovannelli et al. ( | Altered consciousness | Left primary motor cortex | 20 Hz at 60% max output vs sham | 5 | No significant difference | ||
| Koski et al. ( | Post-concussion symptoms | Left DLPFC | 10 Hz at 110% MT | 20 | |||
| Kreuzer et al. ( | 53 y.o. male; severe TBI 5 years prior | Frontotemporal epi- and subdural hematoma | Tinnitus | Left primary auditory cortex | 1 Hz at 110% resting MT | 10 (repeated 5 times in 3 years) | Marked reduction in tinnitus symptoms |
| Manganotti et al. ( | Altered consciousness | Left/right primary motor cortex | 20 Hz at 100% MT | 1 | |||
| Pachalska et al. ( | 20 y.o. male; severe TBI 3–4 years prior | Diffuse atrophy and enlarged ventricles in the RH | Impaired executive functioning | Right + left frontal/temporal regions | 1 Hz to LH and 5 Hz to RH | 20 | Large improvements in most tests of executive functioning and all categories of the FBI |
| Louise-Bender Pape ( | 26 y.o. male in VS 287 days post-TBI | Hemorrhage in lateral and fourth ventricles and right temporal lobe; diffuse subarachnoid hemorrhage | Altered consciousness | Right DLPFC | Paired 100 μs pulse trains with 100 ms ISI and 5 s ITI at 110% MT | 30 | Increased DOCS; clinical, behavioral improvement |
| Louise-Bender Pape ( | 32 y.o. male in VS 9 years post-TBI | Multicystic encephalomalacia of RH and basal ganglia; hypoattenuation in the anterior frontal lobe; dilatation of 3rd and lateral ventricles | Altered consciousness | Left DLPFC | Paired 100 μs pulse trains with 100 ms ISI and 5 s ITI at 110% MT | 21 prior to seizure; 19 post-seizure | Electrographic seizure; improvement in following one-step commands and purposeful vocalizations prior to seizure |
y.o., years old; TBI, traumatic brain injury; Tx, treatment; cTBS, continuous theta burst stimulation; rTMS, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; tDCS, transcranial direct currant stimulation; DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; MT, motor threshold; BIT, Behavioral Inattention Test; MADRS, Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale; SSI, Beck Scale of Suicidal Ideation; PCS, post-concussion syndrome; EEG, electroencephalogram; JFK CRS-C, JFK Coma Recovery Scale-Revised; FBI, frontal behavioral inventory; DOCS, Disorders of Consciousness Scale; RH, right hemisphere; LH, left hemisphere.
Summarized details of reviewed tDCS articles.
| Study | Patient descriptions | Brain damage | Target symptoms | Stimulation location | Stimulation parameters | # Sessions | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Angelakis et al. ( | Altered consciousness | 10 | |||||
| Kang et al. ( | Attention deficits | 2 mA/25 cm2 × 20 min | 1 | Immediate but not lasting improvement in attention | |||
| Les´niak et al. ( | Memory and attention deficits | 1 mA/35 cm−2 × 10 min | 15 | No improvements in attention or memory | |||
| Middleton et al. ( | Motor impairments | 1.5 mA/25 cm2 × 15 min | 24 | Improvement on UE-FM – persisted at a 6-month follow-up | |||
| Thibaut et al. ( | Altered consciousness | 2 mA/35 cm2 × 20 min | 1 | ||||
| Ulam et al. ( | Various neuropsych. functions (including attention and memory) | 1 mA/25 cm2 × 20 min | 10 | No difference in neuropsych. improvement between groups | |||
PVS, persistent vegetative state; MCS, minimally conscious state; DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; SDH, subdural hemorrhage; ICH, intracerebral hemorrhage; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage; BS, brain stem; UE, upper extremity; UWS, unresponsive wakefulness syndrome; UE-FM, Fugl-Meyer Assessment of Sensorimotor Impairment – upper extremity section.