| Literature DB >> 26807338 |
Pei Ling Choo1, Helen L Gallagher1, Jacqui Morris2, Valerie M Pomeroy3, Frederike van Wijck1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bilateral training (BT) of the upper limb (UL) might enhance recovery of arm function after stroke. To better understand the therapeutic potential of BT, this study aimed to determine the correlation between arm motor behavior and brain structure/function as a result of bilateral arm training poststroke.Entities:
Keywords: Bilateral; Stroke; imaging; rehabilitation; review; upper limb
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26807338 PMCID: PMC4714643 DOI: 10.1002/brb3.411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Behav Impact factor: 2.708
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart showing the identification process of the included papers.
Characteristics of included studies
| Study (design; comparison, hypothesis) | Participants (number; age (years); gender (M/F); hand dominance (L/R); time since stroke (years); side of affected hemisphere (L/R); type of stroke; site of stroke, Fugl‐Meyer arm score at baseline). | Intervention (mode of BT; task; amount of practice; organization of practice) | Outcome (time points; outcome measures) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Lewis and Byblow |
Stroke group ( |
Mode of BT: In‐phase |
Assessment time: |
|
Lewis and Perreault |
Stroke group ( |
Motor behavior session: |
Assessment time: |
|
Luft et al. |
BATRAC ( |
BATRAC: |
Assessment time: Within 2 weeks before and after intervention. |
|
Stinear and Byblow |
In‐phase group ( |
In‐phase (APBT) |
Assessment time: |
|
Stinear et al. |
Priming with APBP group ( |
Priming with APBP before UL therapy |
Assessment time: Baseline (within 26 days of stroke), after 4‐week intervention, 12 and 26 weeks after stroke. Modified Rankin Scale and SIS were only assessed 26 weeks after stroke. |
|
Summers et al. |
Bilateral ( |
Bilateral |
Assessment time:Kinematic: |
|
Whitall et al. |
BATRAC ( |
BATRAC: |
Assessment time: |
|
Wu et al. |
BT ( |
BT: |
Assessment time: |
ACA, anterior cerebral artery; AOU, amount of use; APBT, active‐passive bilateral therapy; ARAT, action research arm test; BATRAC, bilateral arm training with rhythmic auditory cueing; BT, bilateral training; CoG, map center of gravity; CV, coefficient of variation; dCIT, distributed constraint‐induced therapy; DMTE, dose‐matched therapeutic exercises; ECR, extensor carpi radialis; EDC, extensor digitorum communis; FDI, first dorsal interosseous muscles; fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging; FM, Fugl‐Meyer arm score; iMEPs, ipsilateral motor evoked potentials evoked by stimulation over the intact hemisphere; IQR, interquartile range; L/R, left/right; iSPs, ipsilateral silent periods; MAL, motor activity log; MAS, Modified Motor Assessment Scale; MCA, middle cerebral artery; MEPs, motor evoked potentials; M/F, male/female; N/A, not applicable; NIHSS, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale; NR, not reported; QOM, quality of movement; RCT, randomized controlled trial; ROM, range of motion; SD, standard deviation; SICI, short latency intracortical inhibition within contralesional M1; SIS, Stroke Impact Scale; S‐R, stimulus–response; TCI, transcallosal inhibition (TCI) from ipsilesional M1 to contralesional M1; TENS, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation; TMS, transcranial magnetic stimulation; UL, upper limb; UMAQS, University of Maryland Arm Questionnaire for Stroke; UT, unilateral training; WMFT, Wolf Motor Function Test.
Transcranial magnetic stimulation methodology of included papers
| Study | Coil Shape/Diameter/Orientation | Description of Grid | Determination of “Hot Spot” | Determination of Resting Excitability Thresholds (RET) | Hemisphere Stimulated and Target Muscles | Muscle Contraction during Stimulation | EMG | Measure on Excitability | Measure on Active Site Mapping |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Lewis and Byblow |
70 mm figure of eight coil |
Cotton cap with premarked grid locations | Scalp location eliciting MEPs of the largest amplitude in ECR and FDI | RET of two muscles determined as the lowest stimulus intensity that generated responses of >50 |
Lesioned and nonlesioned hemispheres to affected muscles |
Nonlesioned hemispheres to affected muscles stimulation: |
Sampled at 4000 Hz | Not done – map area only |
Stimulation of 21 grid locations surrounding the hot spot |
|
Lewis and Perreault |
70 mm figure of eight coil | Not reported | Optimal location for eliciting a MEP in contralateral BB |
RET determined as minimum stimulus intensity at which a response greater than 50 |
Lesioned and nonlesioned hemispheres to affected and nonaffected muscles |
Isometric contraction of BB to 20 ± 2% of max voluntary contraction |
Sampled at 5000 Hz |
MEP latency ipsilateral pathway from lesioned | Not done |
|
Stinear and Byblow |
70 mm figure of eight coil |
Tight fitting cotton cap with premarked coordinates in a 1‐cm grid pattern | Coordinate where MEP amplitudes were greater than amplitudes of adjacent coordinates for a given stimulus intensity | Highest stimulus intensity delivered over the hot spot that produced no more than 4 of 8 consecutive MEPs with an amplitude of ~ 50 |
Lesioned hemisphere to affected muscles and nonlesioned hemispheres to nonaffected muscles | No contraction |
Sampled at 4000 Hz |
Map CoG | 6 MEPs collected from FCR for each coordinate of the grid surrounding a position 4 cm lateral to the vertex |
|
Stinear et al. |
70 mm figure of eight coil | Not reported | Not reported |
Minimum stimulus |
Lesioned hemisphere to affected muscles and nonlesioned hemispheres to nonaffected muscles |
No contraction for S‐R slopes. |
Sampled at 2000 Hz |
S‐R slope for ipsilesional M1 | Not done but determined percentage of trials that produced and depth of iSPs |
|
Summers et al. |
70 mm figure of eight coil | Grid of 1 cm markings based on latitude/longitude system originating at the vertex | Optimal site for producing MEPs in contralateral EDC | Minimum stimulus intensity required to produce discernible MEPs of at least 50 | Lesioned and nonlesioned hemispheres to affected and nonaffected muscles EDC | No contraction |
Sampled at 2000 Hz |
Mean map volume of EDC | Stated with the hot spot and expanded to surrounding points on grid until sites were reached which did not elicit any activation of EDC |
BB, biceps brachii; CoG, map center of gravity; ECR, extensor carpi radialis; EDC, extensor digitorum communis; EMG, electromyography; FCR, flexor carpi radialis; FDI, first dorsal interosseous muscles; iSPs, ipsilateral silent periods; MEPs, motor evoked potentials; S‐R, stimulus–response.
The fMRI methodology of included papers
| Study | Design | Testing task | Comparisons | Control for attention | Control for mirror movements | Data analysis | Time points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luft et al. | Epoch |
Task: Active elbow flexion from 45° ending 60–75° depending on movement ability. |
Affected versus nonaffected UL | Participants kept their eyes closed |
Video monitoring and taping with 2 cameras on head and elbow to assess compliance with the requested movement. |
Whole brain analysis | Within 2 weeks pre and post intervention |
| Whitall et al. | Epoch |
Task: Active elbow flexion from 45° ending 60–75° depending on movement ability. |
Affected versus nonaffected UL | Not reported | Video monitoring and taping with 2 cameras on head and elbow to assess compliance with the requested movement. |
Whole brain analysis | 6 weeks after first baseline and after 6 weeks of intervention |
| Wu et al. | Epoch |
Active finger flexion/extension on affected and nonaffected UL at 2/3 Hz |
Affected versus nonaffected UL | Not reported | Not done. |
Whole brain analysis | Before and immediately after intervention |
BATRAC, bilateral arm training with rhythmic auditory cueing; DMTE, dose‐matched therapeutic exercises; ROIs, regions of interest; ROM, range of motion; UL; upper limb.
Methodological quality assessment using the Effective Public Health Practice Project (EPHPP) Tool
| Study | Selection bias | Study design | Confounders | Blinding | Data collection methods | Withdrawals and dropouts | Global rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lewis and Byblow | Moderate | Moderate | N/A | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Moderate |
| Lewis and Perreault | Weak | Weak | N/A | Moderate | Weak | Weak | Weak |
| Luft et al. | Moderate | Strong | Strong | Moderate | Strong | Strong | Strong |
| Stinear and Byblow | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Weak |
|
Stinear et al. |
Moderate |
Strong |
Strong |
Moderate |
Strong |
Moderate |
Strong |
| Whitall et al. | Moderate | Strong | Strong | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Moderate |
| Wu et al. | Weak | Strong | Weak | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Weak |
Domain could not be assessed as study was not a between‐group design.
Effects of bilateral upper limb task training in included studies
| Study | Motor outcomes | Neurophysiological outcomes | Association between motor and neurophysiological outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lewis and Byblow |
For FM scores, no significant difference across the 3 assessment times ( |
Contralateral motor pathway (lesioned hemisphere to paretic UL): | NR |
| Lewis and Perreault |
Effect of task conditions: |
Complete data for only 13 of the 15 participants due to contraindications to TMS | None of the correlations were significant ( |
| Luft et al. | No significant difference in change in any motor outcome between the BATRAC and DMTE groups ( |
Activation within specific areas: |
NR |
| Stinear and Byblow |
Whole Group |
Complete data for only 3 of the 9 participants in some comparisons. |
Whole Group |
|
Stinear et al. |
Significantly greater proportion of participants in the priming with APBP group ( |
For the APBP priming group only, ipsilesional S‐R slope increased and was higher at 12 and 26 weeks than at 2 weeks after stroke (12 weeks 0.20 s.d. 0.07 mV/10%MSO, |
NR |
| Whitall et al. |
No UL motor outcome data for fMRI subcohort. |
Data for fMRI subcohort: |
Within BATRAC participants only, increase in number of activated voxels in the contralesional superior frontal gyrus ( |
| Wu et al. |
For BT group ( |
For BT group during paretic hand movement in total ROIs (primary sensorimotor cortex, premotor cortex, SMA and cerebellum) ( | NR |
ACC, anterior cingulate cortex; AOU, amount of use; AP, anti‐phase; APBT, Active‐Passive Bilateral Therapy; ARAT, Action Research Arm Test; BATRAC, bilateral arm training with rhythmic auditory cueing; BT, bilateral group; CI, confidence interval; CoG, map center of gravity; CV, coefficient of variation; dCIT, distributed constraint‐induced therapy; DMTE, dose‐matched therapeutic exercises; ECR, extensor carpi radialis; EDC, extensor digitorum communis; FDI, first dorsal interosseous muscles; FM, Fugl‐Meyer arm score; fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging; iMEPs, ipsilateral motor evoked potentials evoked by stimulation over the intact hemisphere; IP, in‐phase; iSPs, ipsilateral silent periods; MAL, Motor Activity Log; MAS, Modified Motor Assessment Scale; MEPs, motor evoked potentials; NR, not reported; QOM, quality of movement; ROIs, regions of interest; SD, standard deviation; SE, standard error; SICI, short latency intracortical inhibition within contralesional M1; SMA; supplementary motor area; S‐R, stimulus–response slope; TCI, transcallosal inhibition (TCI) from ipsilesional M1 to contralesional M1;TMS, transcranial magnetic stimulation; WMFT, Wolf Motor Function Test.
Magnitude data provided where documented in study.
1Data are mean (standard error) except otherwise noted.
Remained significant after adjustment for multiple correction.