| Literature DB >> 31824242 |
Carlos Roncero1,2, Erik Service2, Marco De Caro2, Aleksandar Popov2, Alexander Thiel2, Stephan Probst3, Howard Chertkow1,2,4.
Abstract
We evaluated whether transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in two different montages could improve picture naming abilities in participants with anomic Alzheimer Disease or Frontotemporal dementia.Entities:
Keywords: PPA; anomia; object naming; tDCS; training
Year: 2019 PMID: 31824242 PMCID: PMC6882938 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2019.01231
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Past tDCS studies with primary progressive aphasia (PPA) participants.
| One non-fluent PPA | Refused training | Morning: Left posterior perisylvian region Afternoon: Left broca’s area | Extracephalic: Right shoulder | 1.2 mA | 20 min | 5 sham 5 tDCS | Auditory word-picture identification, picture naming, oral word reading, and word repetition all improved after administering tDCS; decline 2 months post-stimulation | |
| 16 Agrammatic PPA | Speech therapy: repetition of target word, articulatory suppression, picture naming, reading words | Left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex | Extracephalic: Right arm | 2 mA | 25 min | 10 sessions of either sham or tDCS | Improvement for treated items was greater for anodal tDCS than sham tDCS, for untreated items, both montages had similar levels of improvement | |
| Two non-fluent PPA, four logopenic PPA | Participants wrote a letter or letter combination corresponding to a given phoneme | Left inferior frontal gyrus | Extracephalic: Right cheek | 2 mA | 20 min | 15 sessions each condition (tDCS and sham) | Improved Spelling; improvements greater and lasted longer (2 months) in real condition, untrained items improved in real condition only | |
| Two non-fluent PPA, four logopenic PPA | Narrating wordless children’s picture books | Left frontotemporal region | Left occipitoparietal region | 1.5 mA | 20 min | 10 sessions of tDCS | Improvements in speech production and grammatical correctness lasting 3 months; no sham condition | |
| 12 semantic PPA | Simple visuomotor task: Press a button when a particular object reaches the edge of the screen. Done to maintain vigilance. | Session 1: Left temporal (FT7 to FT9) Session 2: Left fronto-orbital | Session 1: Right frontoorbital Session 2: Right temporal (FT8 to FT10) | 1.59 mA | 20 min | 3 sessions (one session per condition) | Compared to sham, tDCS sessions improved responses to questions written in a verbal format on a semantic matching task, reaction times to questions regarding living items were faster after anode fronto-orbital and cathode right temporal stimulation. | |
| Six non-fluent PPA, two logopenic PPA, two semantic PPA | Repeated naming of items incorrectly named at that day’s session | Left inferior parietotemporal region | Right frontoorbital region | 2 mA | 30 min | 10 sessions each Condition (tDCS and sham) | Picture naming scores for trained and untrained items improved more in the real condition; lasting at least 2 weeks | |
| One logopenic PPA, three semantic PPA, one early onset AD | Repeated spontaneous naming, sentence production, and semantic feature generation | Left temporoparietal region | Centered over the forehead | 1.5 mA | 20 min | 10 sessions of tDCS | Improved naming for trained items lasting 6 months; there was no sham condition. Zero improvement for untrained items. No change observed for early onset AD participant. | |
| Six non-fluent PPA, one logopenic PPA | Narrating wordless children’s picture books | Left frontotemporal region | Left occipitoparietal region | 1.5 mA | 20 min | 10 sessions of either sham or tDCS | Individuals who scored low at baseline had greater propensity to improve when given real tDCS relative to sham tDCS | |
| 14 non-fluent PPA, 12 logopenic PPA, 10 semantic PPA | Confrontation verbal and written naming; errors corrected and repeated | Left inferior frontal gyrus | Extracephalic: Right cheek | 2 mA | 20 min | 15 sessions each condition (tDCS and sham) | Written naming letter accuracy for trained and untrained items improved for logopenic and non-fluent PPA, no change found for semantic PPA |
FIGURE 1Parieto-Temporal Montage. Images display the parieto-temporal tDCS montage with anode on left parieto-temporal area and cathode on right supraorbital lobe. Activation prediction based on modeling software from Soterix HD-Explore; color gradients reflect increasing levels of predicted intensity from blue to red, where red reflects a peak intensity of 0.61 mA. Images courtesy of Soterix.
FIGURE 2DLPFC montage. Images display the DLPFC tDCS montage with anode on left DLPFC area and cathode on right deltoid muscle. Activation prediction based on modeling software from Soterix HD-Explore; color gradients reflect increasing levels of predicted intensity from blue to red, where red reflects a peak intensity of 0.61 mA. Images courtesy of Soterix.
FIGURE 3Attrition rate over time. The above flowchart displays the attrition rate for the separate counter-balance groups across the different rounds. Each counter-balance group began with an initial cohort of nine participants, but attrition led to only 4 people completing the three rounds without disease progression effects.
Patient diagnostic and general cognition data.
| NF1 | FTD, nf PPA | 72 | M | 15 | 24 | 28 | 57 |
| NF2 | FTD, nf PPA | 62 | M | 11 | 13 | 17 | 59 |
| NF3 | FTD, nf PPA | 75 | M | 11 | 21 | 26 | 58 |
| NF4 | FTD, nf PPA | 72 | F | 11 | 11 | 17 | 44 |
| LG1 | AD, logo PPA | 64 | M | 18 | 7 | 12 | 44 |
| LG2 | AD, logo PPA | 61 | F | 8 | 9 | 18 | 28 |
| LG3 | AD, logo PPA | 63 | F | 18 | 24 | 27 | 56 |
| LG4 | AD, logo PPA | 69 | M | 11 | 10 | 17 | 30 |
| SV1 | FTD, sv PPA | 54 | M | 16 | 16 | 28 | 8 |
| SV2 | FTD, sv PPA | 59 | M | 14 | 19 | 25 | 26 |
| SV3 | FTD, sv PPA | 71 | F | 18 | 22 | 26 | 9 |
| SV4 | FTD, sv PPA | 63 | M | 11 | 17 | 18 | 15 |
FIGURE 4Comparisons to baseline for the naming scores of trained items at end of stimulation sessions, 2-weeks post-stimulation, and 2-months post-stimulation. ∗ significant at p < 0.05 for that evaluation compared to the scores obtained at baseline. (A–C) Displays the results for the different montages. (A) Parieto-temporal montage, (B) DLPFC montage, and (C) SHAM.
FIGURE 5Comparisons to baseline for the naming scores of untrained items at end of stimulation sessions, 2-weeks poststimulation, and 2-months post-stimulation. ∗ significant at p < 0.05 for that evaluation compared to the scores obtained at baseline. (A–C) Displays the results for the different montages. (A) Parieto-temporal montage, (B) DLPFC montage, and (C) SHAM.
FIGURE 6Comparison of montage conditions for trained items at each evaluation: Baseline, End of Stimulation Sessions, 2-Weeks Post Stimulation, 2-Months Post Stimulation. ∗ significant at p < 0.05, meaning the scores for one montage were higher than those obtained for another montage at that evaluation. (A–D) Refer to the different times of evaluation. (A) baseline evaluation, (B) evaluation at final tDCS session, (C) evaluation two-weeks post-stimulation, and (D) two-months post-stimulation.
FIGURE 7Comparison of montage conditions for untrained items at each evaluation: Baseline, End of Stimulation Sessions, 2 Weeks Post Stimulation, 2-Months Post Stimulation. ∗ significant at p < 0.05, meaning the scores for one montage were higher than those obtained for another montage at that evaluation. (A–D) Refer to the different times of evaluation. (A) baseline evaluation, (B) evaluation at final tDCS session, (C) evaluation two-weeks post-stimulation, and (D) two-months post-stimulation.
FIGURE 8Individual scores for untrained items when receiving the parieto-temporal montage at baseline and at the final stimulation session. The three groups represent the three PPA sub-types (nfPPA, logoPPA, svPPA). Lines between the score at baseline and the score at the first subsequent evaluation are used to help visualize if a person’s score increased, decreased, or stayed the same. (A–C) Refer to the different PPA sub-types. (A) nfPPA, (B) logoPPA, and (C) svPPA.