| Literature DB >> 28232816 |
Stephanie Lefebvre1, Sook-Lei Liew1.
Abstract
Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is a non-invasive brain stimulation method to modulate the local field potential in neural tissue and consequently, cortical excitability. As tDCS is relatively portable, affordable, and accessible, the applications of tDCS to probe brain-behavior connections have rapidly increased in the last 10 years. One of the most promising applications is the use of tDCS to modulate excitability in the motor cortex after stroke and promote motor recovery. However, the results of clinical studies implementing tDCS to modulate motor excitability have been highly variable, with some studies demonstrating that as many as 50% or more of patients fail to show a response to stimulation. Much effort has therefore been dedicated to understand the sources of variability affecting tDCS efficacy. Possible suspects include the placement of the electrodes, task parameters during stimulation, dosing (current amplitude, duration of stimulation, frequency of stimulation), individual states (e.g., anxiety, motivation, attention), and more. In this review, we first briefly review potential sources of variability specific to stroke motor recovery following tDCS. We then examine how the anatomical variability in tDCS placement [e.g., neural target(s) and montages employed] may alter the neuromodulatory effects that tDCS exerts on the post-stroke motor system.Entities:
Keywords: electrode placement; motor recovery; optimal stimulation parameters; stroke; tDCS
Year: 2017 PMID: 28232816 PMCID: PMC5298973 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Conventional transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) setup. The conventional tDCS setup requires a small tDCS stimulator with a 9-V battery, two saline-soaked sponge electrodes and one rubber band to hold the electrodes in place on the head. While there are many options for convention tDCS, the unit shown here is the Chattanooga Iontophoresis device.
Figure 2High-definition tDCS (HD-tDCS) setup. The HD-tDCS setup requires the use of several small electrodes to build the desire montage. The electrodes are fixed on the HD-cap. The parameters of the stimulation are stored in the small transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) stimulator attached at the back of the head and usually modeled using a computer program. While there are several options for HD-tDCS, the unit shown here is the Neuroelectrics Starstim device.
Figure 3Publications on transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), stroke, and motor recovery. Exponentially increasing number of publications on tDCS, stroke, and motor recovery via PubMed over time.
tDCS to enhance hand/arm motor function after stroke.
| PART 1 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simple motor performance + tDCS | ||||
| Montage | Comparison group/results | Reference | ||
| 6 | A and B over M1 | Sham comparison group: improvement on JTT with both cathodal and anodal tDCS just after stimulation | ( | |
| 1 | B over M1 | Sham comparison group: improvement on JTT, pinch force, and simple reaction time just after stimulation | ( | |
| 6 | B over M1 | Sham comparison group: improvement on JTT immediately after stimulation and maintained 20 min after | ( | |
| 11 | B over M1 | Sham comparison group: improvement on both JTT and reaction time immediately after stimulation | ( | |
| 13 | A and B over M1 | Sham comparison group: both anodal and cathodal tDCS induce a significant reduction of reaction time | ( | |
| 19 | C over M1 | Sham comparison group: improvement on both digital dexterity (PPT) and the precision grip | ( | |
| 10 | A, B, C and B with extracephalic reference electrode over M1 | Sham comparison group: tDCS induces enhancement on JTT except when used with extracephalic reference electrode | ( | |
| 7 | 6 | B over M1 | No comparison group: improvement on JTT and upper limb function | ( |
| 9 | 5 | A over M1 | Sham comparison group: improvement on JTT maintained at 2 weeks after the end of the treatment | ( |
| 20 | 5 | C over M1 | Sham comparison group: improvement in both FMT and WMFT maintained 1 week after the end of the treatment | ( |
| 14 | 14 | C over M1 | Sham comparison group: improvement on JTT, FMT, and maximum grip strength maintained 4 weeks after the end of the stimulation | ( |
| 5 | 10 | C over M1 | No comparison group: improvement of motor function combined with an increased functional connectivity between M1 and dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) in the ipsilesional hemisphere | ( |
| 12 | 5 | B over PMd | Sham comparison group: gains in motor function and dexterity accompanied by an increase in excitability of the contralesional rather than the ipsilesional hemisphere | ( |
| 18 | 5 | A and B over M1 | Between stimulation comparison (no sham): both anodal and cathodal tDCS induced motor function improvement | ( |
| 19 | 10 | C over M1 | Sham comparison group: tDCS had a role in motor imagery facilitation | ( |
| 20 | 20 | B over M1 | No stimulation comparison group: tDCS was more beneficial than functional training in order to improve motor function | ( |
| 40 | 6 | A and B over M1 | Sham comparison group: both anodal and cathodal tDCS enhanced rehabilitation induced motor function | ( |
| 59 | 15 | A over M1 | Cathodal stimulation alone and training alone comparison groups: cathodal tDCS combined with virtual reality therapy induced a greater improvement in motor function than each intervention alone | ( |
| 14 | 5 | A over M1 | Sham comparison group: cathodal tDCS combined with occupational therapy induced improvements in motor function | ( |
| 12 | SRTT | A over M1 | Sham comparison group: cathodal tDCS improved motor skill learning compared to sham by 20% | ( |
| 18 | VMT | C over M1 | Sham comparison group: enhanced online motor skill learning and enhanced long-term retention (×10) | ( |
| 19 | VMT | C over M1 | Sham comparison group: enhanced online motor skill learning and enhanced long-term retention associated with functional brain reorganization | ( |
| 12 | A over M1 | Sham comparison group: improvement of proximal upper limb motor function for mildly impaired patients but degradation for the more impaired patients | ( | |
| 12 | B over M1 | Sham comparison group: movement kinematics improved only with tDCS delivered prior training | ( | |
| 12 | A, B, and C over M1 | Sham comparison group: anodal and cathodal tDCS lead to superior motor performance improvements and changes in cortical excitability than bi-hemispheric tDCS | ( | |
| 9 | A and B over M1 | Sham comparison group: motor improvement is dependent on the shoulder abduction loading | ( | |
| 10 | B over M1 | Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation comparison group: in absence of combined motor practice, anodal tDCS failed to induce motor performance improvement | ( | |
| 16 | B over M1 | Sham comparison group: anodal tDCS induces motor performance improvements but failed to enhance the effects of 2 days in rehabilitation training | ( | |
| 18 | 10 | A and B over M1 | Sham comparison group: only cathodal tDCS (not anodal) is able to enhance rehabilitation induced motor function | ( |
| 23 | 10 | C over M1 | Sham comparison group: motor improvement only for patients with chronic and subcortical stroke | ( |
| 20 | 5 | C over M1 | Sham comparison group: bi-hemispheric tDCS reduces interhemispheric imbalance despite no observable clinical improvement | ( |
| 96 | 6 | A and B over M1 | Sham comparison group: neither anodal nor cathodal tDCS enhances bilateral arm training induced motor function | ( |
| 25 | 5 | B over M1 | Sham comparison group: anodal tDCS was not able to induce motor function improvement | ( |
| 20 | 15 | B over M1 | Sham comparison group: anodal tDCS was not able to induce a greater motor function improvement than sham but induced a reduction in wrist spasticity | ( |
PART 1: studies that demonstrate a motor improvement with tDCS.
PART 2: studies that either do not demonstrate motor improvement with tDCS, or compare conditions and show conflicting results depending on the design.
tDCS, transcranial direct current stimulation; SRTT, serial reaction time task; VMT, visuomotor task; CIMT, constraint-induced movement therapy; JTT, Jebsen–Taylor test; FMT, Fugl–Meyer test; WMFT, Wolf motor function test; montage A, uni-hemispheric tDCS with cathode over contralesional hemisphere; montage B, uni-hemispheric tDCS with anode over ipsilesional hemisphere; montage C, bi-hemispheric tDCS.