| Literature DB >> 31920570 |
Martina Maier1, Belén Rubio Ballester1, Paul F M J Verschure1,2.
Abstract
What are the principles underlying effective neurorehabilitation? The aim of neurorehabilitation is to exploit interventions based on human and animal studies about learning and adaptation, as well as to show that the activation of experience-dependent neuronal plasticity augments functional recovery after stroke. Instead of teaching compensatory strategies that do not reduce impairment but allow the patient to return home as soon as possible, functional recovery might be more sustainable as it ensures a long-term reduction in impairment and an improvement in quality of life. At the same time, neurorehabilitation permits the scientific community to collect valuable data, which allows inferring about the principles of brain organization. Hence neuroscience sheds light on the mechanisms of learning new functions or relearning lost ones. However, current rehabilitation methods lack the exact operationalization of evidence gained from skill learning literature, leading to an urgent need to bridge motor learning theory and present clinical work in order to identify a set of ingredients and practical applications that could guide future interventions. This work aims to unify the neuroscientific literature relevant to the recovery process and rehabilitation practice in order to provide a synthesis of the principles that constitute an effective neurorehabilitation approach. Previous attempts to achieve this goal either focused on a subset of principles or did not link clinical application to the principles of motor learning and recovery. We identified 15 principles of motor learning based on existing literature: massed practice, spaced practice, dosage, task-specific practice, goal-oriented practice, variable practice, increasing difficulty, multisensory stimulation, rhythmic cueing, explicit feedback/knowledge of results, implicit feedback/knowledge of performance, modulate effector selection, action observation/embodied practice, motor imagery, and social interaction. We comment on trials that successfully implemented these principles and report evidence from experiments with healthy individuals as well as clinical work.Entities:
Keywords: motor learning; neurorehabilitation; plasticity; principles; stroke
Year: 2019 PMID: 31920570 PMCID: PMC6928101 DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2019.00074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Syst Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5137
Overview of the neuronal changes due to exposure to principles of neurorehabilitation included in this manuscript.
| Increased neuronal activity | Spaced practice | Task/stimulus-dependent | |
| Increased cell survival and improved LTP | Spaced practice | Hippocampus | |
| Upregulation of growth factors (protein 43, synaptophysin) | Dosage | Intact corticospinal tract | |
| Inhibition of upregulation of growth-inhibiting factors (NogoA, Nogo receptors and RhoA) | Dosage | Peri-infarct cortex | |
| Dopamine-dependent synaptic plasticity | Explicit feedback | Striatum | |
| Complex spikes in Purkinje cells | Implicit feedback | Cerebellum | |
| Expansion or change of effector representation/cortical map, dependent on effector trained | Massed practice | Motor cortex | |
| Increased excitability | - Dosage | - Motor cortex | - |
| - Variable practice | - Motor cortex | - | |
| Normalization of activation in ipsilesional cortex | Dosage | Motor cortex | |
| Change in sensorimotor organization | Multisensory stimulation | Motor cortex | |
| Increased neuronal recruitment during acquisition, decreased activity during retention | Variable practice | Prefrontal areas, PMA, inferior frontal areas | |
| Increased cortical activation in lesioned hemisphere during paretic movement | - Task-specific practice | - SMC, PMC - SMC | - |
| - Modulate effector selection | - SSC/SMA, dorsal PMC | - | |
| Increased cortical activation in contralesional hemisphere during paretic movement | Rhythmic cueing | SMC | |
| Decreased activation in contralesional hemisphere during paretic movement | Task-specific practice | - SMC, PMC, SMA - Motor cortex - SMA, PMA | - |
| Increased laterality index during paretic movement | Task-specific practice | - SMC - Motor cortex - SMC, SMA, PMA | - |
| Increased power spectra | Multisensory stimulation | SMC, SSC | |
| Increased activation of contralateral fronto-parietal network | Goal-oriented practice | Motor cortex, SMA, SSC, parietal areas | |
| Increased activation of bilateral parietal areas, together with lateralized pre-motor areas and sensorimotor areas | Increasing difficulty | PMC, SMA, SMC, SPA, IPA | |
| Increased activation of bilateral parietal, premotor and visual areas | Action observation | Dorsal and ventral PMC, pre-SMA, SPA, IPA, visual cortex | |
| Increased activation of lateralized parietal areas, together with pre-motor areas | Motor imagery | Bilateral dorsal PMC, left ventral PMC, Bilateral pre-SMA, left IPA, left SPA, | |
| Increased activation and functional connectivity | Mirror therapy | - Ipsilateral motor cortex, visual processing areas | - |
| - Bilateral PMA, contralateral SMA and SMC, parietal cortex | - | ||
| Increased activation | - Rhythmic cueing | - Cerebellum (ipsilesional) | - |
| - Modulate effector selection | - Cerebellum (bilateral) | - | |
| Reversal of SEP to pre-infarct | Dosage | Somatosensory cortex | |
| Auditory feedback lead to reduced activity during acquisition | Implicit feedback | SMC, SMA, opercular, temporal and parietal areas | |
| Visual feedback lead to increased activity during acquisition | Implicit feedback | Occipital gyri, cerebellar lobules and vermis | |
| Visual feedback preserved activation, when no feedback was given during testing | Implicit feedback | Occipitotemporal cortex | |
| Auditory feedback suppressed activity, when no feedback was given during testing | Implicit feedback | Auditory cortex | |
| Increased fractional anisotropy | Rhythmic cueing | Arcuate fasciculus (white matter tract connecting auditory and motor regions) | |
| Activity in social cue network | Social interaction | Right posterior STS, right anterior STS, right TPJ | |