| Literature DB >> 32425869 |
Fioravante Capone1,2, Francesco Motolese1,2, Emma Falato1,2, Mariagrazia Rossi1,2, Vincenzo Di Lazzaro1.
Abstract
Fatigue is a very common symptom among people with multiple sclerosis (MS), but its management in clinical practice is limited by the lack of clear evidence about the pathogenic mechanisms, objective tools for diagnosis, and effective pharmacological treatments. In this scenario, neurophysiology could play a decisive role, thanks to its ability to provide objective measures and to explore the peripheral and the central structures of the nervous system. We hereby review and discuss current evidence about the potential role of neurophysiology in the management of MS-related fatigue. In the first part, we describe the use of neurophysiological techniques for exploring the pathogenic mechanisms of fatigue. In the second part, we review the potential application of neurophysiology for monitoring the response to pharmacological therapies. Finally, we show data about the therapeutic implications of neurophysiological techniques based on non-invasive brain stimulation.Entities:
Keywords: TMS; fatigue; multiple sclerosis; neurophysiology; non-invasive brain stimulation; tDCS
Year: 2020 PMID: 32425869 PMCID: PMC7212459 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00251
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Neurophysiological studies exploring the pathogenic mechanisms of fatigue in PwMS.
| Steens et al. ( | EMG | 20 PwMS + 20 HCs | 20 patients (RR); age range: 20–58 years; EDSS <5.5 | Positive correlation between fatigue perception and the decline of MCV during a sustained contraction |
| Rice et al. ( | EMG | 4 PwMS + 16 HCs | 4 patients (SP, RR); age range: 28–53 years; mean EDSS 4.6 | PwMS present lower values of MVC |
| Sheean et al. ( | EMG | 21 PwMS + 19 HCs | 21 patients (RR; SP, PP); age range: 26–55 years; mean EDSS: 2–8 | PwMS present lower values of MVC |
| Perretti et al. ( | MEP | 41 PwMS | 41 patients (RR), on IFN b1a treatment; age range: 30.7 ± 8.8; EDSS: 3.2 ± 0.5; divided into fatigued and not-fatigued | MS patients do not have TMS MEP depression following fatiguing exercise, while post-exercise MEP facilitation was similar to that seen in normal subjects |
| Steens et al. ( | EMG | 20 PwMS + 20 HCs | 20 patients; age range: 21–58 years; EDSS ≤ 5 | Decrease of voluntary activation during fatiguing exercise in PwMS in comparison to HC |
| Wolkorte et al. ( | EMG | 45 PwMS + 25 HCs | 45 patients (RR, SP); age range: 20–65 years; EDSS: 0–7 | Compared to controls, the SPMS patients had reduced voluntary activation during brief and sustained contractions. |
| Eken et al. ( | EMG | 8 PwMS + 10 HCs | 8 patients (RR, SP, PP); age range: 49 ± 9 years; EDSS: 1–6 | Prolonged walking produces a significant decrease of EMG median frequency and an increase of root mean square EMG signal of the soleus muscle |
| Severijns et al. ( | EMG | 16 PwMS + 16 HCs | 16 patients (RR, SP, PP); age range: 55 ± 8 years; mean EDSS: 6; divided into fatigued and not-fatigued | PwMS with hand grip weakness, experience a larger increase in fatigue compared to PwMS with normal hand grip strength |
| Leocani et al. ( | EEG | 33 PwMS + 14 HCs | 33 patients; EDSS <1.5; divided into fatigued (age: 33 ± 8 years) and not-fatigued (age: 32 ± 6 years) | In PwMS, FSS correlated positively with ERD over midline frontal structures during movement and inversely with contralateral sensorimotor ERD after movement |
| Petajan and White ( | MEP | 32 PwMS + 10 HCs | 32 patients; divided into 2 subgroups: patients without weakness of upper limbs (age: 44 ± 10.3 years) and patients with weakness of upper limbs (age: 42.9 ± 9.9 years) | Decrease of MEP amplitude similar to HCs |
| Liepert et al. ( | MEP | 16 PwMS RR + 6 HCs | 16 patients, divided in 2 subgroups: fatigued (FSS > 4, mean EDSS: 3.1); not-fatigued (FSS <4, mean EDSS: 2.9) | Decrease of MEP amplitude similar to HC; in fatigued patients, SICI was reduced at baseline |
| Thickbroom et al. ( | MEP | 10 PwMS + 13 HCs | 10 patients (RR); age range: 33–64 years; EDSS ≤ 4; MRC grade ≥ 4/5 | Increase of MEP amplitude in PwMS compared to HC |
| Mordillo-Mateos et al. ( | MEP | 17 PwMS + 16 HCs | 17 patients (RR; SP); mean age: 36.3 ± 9.5 years; mean EDSS: 5 | No changes in MEP amplitude in the two groups |
| Morgante et al. ( | MEP | 33 PwMS | 33 patients (RR), divided into 2 subgroups: fatigued (mean age 38 ± 9.4 years; mean EDSS 1.6 ± 0.6) and not-fatigued (mean age 41.1 ± 10.9 years; mean EDSS 1.8 ± 0.6) | PwMS with fatigue lacked pre-movement facilitation compared to PwMS without fatigue and HC |
| Conte et al. ( | 5Hz rTMS, PAS | 25 PwMS + 18 HCs | 25 patients (RR); EDSS <3.5; divided into 2 subgroups, fatigued (mean age 41.3 ± 7.7 years; mean EDSS 1) and not-fatigued (mean age 38.3 ± 8.4 years; mean EDSS 1.1) | In non-fatigued patients, PAS and rTMS increased the MEP response; in fatigued patients, they did not produce changes in cortical excitability |
| Capone et al. ( | SEP, HFO | 15 PwMS + 15 HCs | 15 patients (RR); mean age: 42.1 years; mean EDSS 1 | Fatiguing task induces a change in the early component of HFOs in PwMS |
| Russo et al. ( | MEP | 24 PwMS + 10 HCs | 24 patients (RR), age range: 18–65 years; EDSS ≤ 2.5 | Premovement facilitation is reduced in fatigued PwMS |
| Russo et al. ( | MEP | 30 PwMS | 30 patients (RR); mean age: 24–63 years; EDSS <3.5; divided into 2 subgroups, fatigued and not-fatigued | Fatigue is associated with a disruption of brain networks involved in motor preparation processes, depending on frontal-thalamic pathways |
| Chalah et al. ( | MEP | 38 PwMS | 38 patients (RR, PP, SP); age range: 34–67 years; EDSS: 3–6.5; divided into 2 subgroups, fatigued and not-fatigued | Fatigued patients had higher depression, anxiety, alexithymia scores, higher SICI, larger caudate nuclei, and smaller left parietal cortex. |
| Chaves et al. ( | MEP | 82 PwMS | 92 patients (RR; PP, SP); mean age: 47.40 ± 10.2 years; EDSS 2.04 ± 1. | Longer CSP predicted worsened fatigue in PwMS |
| Pokryszko-Dragan et al. ( | ERP | 86 PwMS + 40 HCs | 86 patients (CIS; RR; SP); age range: 19–60 years; EDSS: 1–6.5; divided into 3 groups: not fatigued, moderately fatigued, severely fatigued | Fatigued PwMS have worse cognitive performances and delayed latency in P300 component of auditory ERP |
| Pokryszko-Dragan et al. ( | ERP | 44 CIS + 45 HCs | 44 patients (CIS); age range: 21 – 48 years; EDSS: 1–2 | N200 latency was correlated with fatigue. |
| Chinnadurai et al. ( | ERP | 50 PwMS + 50 HCs | 50 patients (RR; PP; SP); age range: 13–66 years; EDSS: 1–9 | Clinical measures of cognitive fatigue were correlated with the neurophysiological measures (ERP) |
| Lazarevic et al. ( | ERP | 81 PwMS + 32 HCs | 81 patients (RR); age: 41.09 ± 8.72 years; EDSS: 0–7; divided in two groups: fatigued and not fatigued | Depression and fatigue have no effect on ERP amplitude and latency |
| Bridoux et al. ( | MEP | 30 PwMS + 15 HCs | 12 fatigued patients (RR; SP); mean age: 44 ± 3 years; EDSS: 1–3.5 | In PwMS, sleep does not enhance motor recovery from PECD following a fatiguing exercise |
| Lebre et al. ( | ANS testing | 50 PwMS | 50 patients (RR); mean age 37 years; EDSS <3.5; divided in two subgroups: fatigued and not-fatigued | Loss in the capacity to increase the blood pressure in patients with fatigue, suggesting a sympathetic dysfunction |
| Flachenecker et al. ( | ANS testing | 60 PwMS + 36 HCs | 60 patients (RR); mean age 41.5 ± 9.9 years; mean EDSS 3.0; divided in two subgroups: fatigued and not-fatigued | The median HR response to standing (HR-Post30/15) was significantly reduced, and BP-Grip tended to be lower in pwMS compared to HCs. |
| Niepel et al. ( | Sleep study | 26 PwMS + 9 HCs | 26 patients (RR; SP; PP); divided in 2 subgroups, fatigued (FSS > 5; age range 49.4 ± 9.2 years) and not-fatigued patients (FSS <4.0; age range 41.8 ± 13.1 years) | Fatigue patients showed evidence of reduced level of alertness on a number of subjective and objective measures of alertness, in contrast to non-fatigued MS patients and HCs |
| Keselbrener et al. ( | ANS testing | 10 PwMS + 10 HCs | 10 patients; age: 22–58 years; FSS > 3.5 | Fatigued PwMS showed a reduction in vagal activity which was more marked than in the control subjects |
| Heesen et al. ( | ANS testing | 23 PwMS + 25 HCs | 23 patients (RR; SP); mean age: 40.13 ± 2.23 years; mean EDSS 2.36 ± 0.36. 14 patients on DMD (8 interferon, 5 glatiramer acetate, 1 azathioprine) | Cognitive stress induces IFNγ production in HC but not in MS patients with fatigue. Reduced cardiac response might indicate an autonomic dysfunction in PwMS. |
| Sander et al. ( | ANS testing | 53 PwMS | 53 patients (RR, SP, PP); mean age: 50.1 ± 8.7 years; mean EDSS 3.3 ± 1.7 | Reduced responsiveness and high- and very-low-frequency components of HR variability, indicating an increased parasympathetic activity |
| de Rodez Benavent et al. ( | ANS (pupillary response) | 49 PwMS + 46 HCs | 49 patients (RR); age range: 18–50 years; mean EDSS 1.9 ± 0.8 | MS-related changes in cognition and fatigue could be associated with changes in the autonomic regulation of task-related pupillary responses |
EMG, electromyography; PwMS, people with multiple sclerosis; HCs, healthy controls; RR, relapsing–remitting; PP, primary progressive; SP, secondary progressive; EDSS, expanded disability status scale; MVC, maximum voluntary contraction; MEP, motor-evoked potentials; IFN, interferon; TMS, transcranial magnetic stimulation; EEG, electroencephalography; ERD, event-related desynchronization; FSS, fatigue severity scale; SICI, short-interval intracortical inhibition; PAS, paired associative stimulation; rTMS, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; SEP, somatosensory-evoked potentials; HFO, high-frequency oscillations; CSP, cortical silent period; CIS, clinically isolated syndrome; PECD, post-exercise cortical depression; ERP, event-related potentials; ANS, autonomic nervous system; HR, heart rate; BP, blood pressure; MS, multiple sclerosis.
Neurophysiological studies for monitoring response to therapies for fatigue in PwMS.
| Santarnecchi et al. ( | Amantadine | MEP, EMG for CSP study | 10 PwMS + 10 HCs | 10 patients (RR; SP); age range: 24–44 years; mean EDSS: 2.1 ± 1.4 | Normalization of CSP in basal condition and a reduction of CSP duration after the fatiguing task |
| Reis et al. ( | Amantadine, single dose | MEP, EMG for CSP, SICI, LICI | 14 HCs | 14 healthy volunteers; mean age: 25 ± 2.8 years | A single dose of amantadine was able to modulate motor cortex excitability (decreases ICF and increases LICI in M1) |
| Lange et al. ( | Modafinil, 100 mg/day for the first week and 200 mg/day for subsequent 7 weeks vs. placebo | MEP | 21 PwMS | 21 patients, FSS ≥ 36, EDSS <7.0; divided into 2 subgroups: treated (mean age: 42.6 ± 9.7 years; mean EDSS; 3.1 ± 0.6) and placebo (mean age: 44.1 ± 12.1 years; mean EDSS: 3.2 ± 1.1) | Increase MEP size by paired pulse TMS in the modafinil group |
| Nagels et al. ( | Modafinil, 100 mg, once daily, for 4 weeks | ERP | 33 PwMS | 33 fatigued patients (RR; SP; PP); mean age: 43 ± 2 years; mean EDSS: 5 | A shorter P300 latency at baseline was associated with a better response to modafinil treatment |
| Sheean et al. ( | 3,4- diaminopyridine | MEP | 8 PwMS | 8 patients (RR; SP; PP); mean age: 39 years; mean EDSS: 6 | After treatment, fatigue was significantly reduced but the neurophysiological parameters (central motor conduction tip and MEP amplitude) did not change |
| 4-AP vs. fluoxetine | SEP, MEP | 60 PwMS | 60 patients (RR); age range: 18–50 years; mean EDSS: 5.5; divided into 2 subgroups: fatigued (mean EDSS: 3.3 ± 2.5) and not-fatigued (mean EDSS: 3.1 ± 2.3) | Significant reduction of the fatigue questionnaire scores, with a greater reduction for the 4-AP subgroup | |
| Marion et al. ( | 4-aminopyridine, 10 mg bd, for 8 consecutive weeks vs. placebo | VEP, SEP, MEP | 40 PwMS | 40 patients (RR; SP; PP); mean age: 52 years; mean EDSS: 6.0 | Fampridine did not produce significant changes in upper limb function, fatigue, and neurophysiological parameters |
MEP, motor evoked potentials; EMG, electromyography; CSP, cortical silent period; PwMS, people with multiple sclerosis; HCs, healthy controls; RR, relapsing–remitting; PP, primary progressive; SP, secondary progressive; EDSS, expanded disability status scale; SICI, short interval intracortical inhibition; LICI, long-interval intracortical inhibition; TMS, transcranial magnetic stimulation; ERP, event-related potentials; SEP, somatosensory-evoked potentials; VEP, visual-evoked potentials.
Sham-controlled NIBS studies for the treatment of MS-related fatigue.
| Saiote et al. ( | Left DLPFC 5 × 7 cm | Right forehead 6 × 15 cm | 20 min/day, 5 days 1 mA | No | - FSS | Crossover, sham-controlled (2-week wash-out) | 13 RR | Clinically definite MS ( | Tingling, light headache |
| Ayache et al. ( | Left DLPFC 25 cm2 | Right supraorbital region 25 cm2 | 20 min/day, 3 days 2 mA | No | MFIS (secondary outcome) | Crossover, sham-controlled (3-week wash-out) | 16 (11RR, 4SP, 1PP) | Clinically definite MS ( | Insomnia, nausea, severe headache, phosphenes |
| Chalah et al. ( | a) Left DLPFC 25 cm2 b) Right PPC 25 cm2 in different blocks | a) Right supraorbital region 25 cm2 b) Cz (EEG 10-20 system) 25 cm2 | 20 min/day, 5 days 2 mA | a) Yes (on FSS and on MFIS physical and psychosocial subscales) b) No | - FSS | Crossover. sham-controlled (3-week wash-out) | 10 (9 RR, 1 SP) | Clinically definite MS ( | a) None b) Insomnia, headache |
| Charvet et al. ( | Left DLPFC 5 × 5 cm | Right DLPFC 5 × 5 cm | Remotely supervised tDCS combined with computer-based cognitive training 20 min/day, 20 days over 4 weeks From 1.5 to 2 mA | YES | - FSS | Randomized, sham-controlled | 27 (15 active of which 40% RR, 12 sham of which 58% RR) | Clinically definite MS Active group ( | Tingling, itching, burning, head pain, difficulty concentrating |
| Fiene et al. ( | Left DLPFC 5 × 5 cm | Right shoulder 5 × 7 cm | Single session of 27.29 ± 1.15 min (10 min tDCS only, 20 min tDCS during testing) 1.5 mA | Yes (on P300 amplitude and RT, not on subjective fatigue) | - P300 amplitude and latency during an auditory oddball task | Crossover, sham-controlled (1-week wash-out) | 15 (14 RR, 1 SP) | Clinically definite MS ( | itching |
| - subjective fatigue via a 10-point numerical rating scale and objective fatigue (e.g., WEIMuS physical) | |||||||||
| Ferrucci et al. ( | Bilateral motor cortex 5 × 7 cm | Right deltoid 5 × 7 cm | 15 min/day, 5 days 1.5 mA | Yes (n23, 15 responders) | FIS | Crossover, sham controlled (1-month wash-out) | 25 (22 RR, 3 SP) | Clinically definite MS ( | Skin reaction |
| Tecchio et al. ( | Whole-body bilateral somatosensory cortex Custom-sized S1 electrode using individual brain MRI data 35 cm2 | Oz (EEG 10–20 system) 7 × 10 cm | 15 min/day, 5 days 1.5 mA | Yes | MFIS | Crossover, sham-controlled (washout individually calculated by MFIS compared to baseline) | 10 (7 RR, 1 SP, 2 PP) | MS in a mild state (EDSS <3.5) with MFIS > 38 | None reported |
| Tecchio et al. ( | Oz (EEG 10–20 system) 6 × 14 cm | 15 min/day, 5 days 1.5 mA | Yes | MFIS | Crossover, sham-controlled (washout individually calculated by MFIS compared to baseline | 13 RR | MS patients with physical items mFIS score > 15 | None reported | |
| Cancelli et al. ( | Oz (EEG 10–20 system) 7 × 10 cm | 15 min/day, 5 days 1.5 mA | Yes | MFIS | Crossover, sham-controlled | 10 RR | MS patients ( | None | |
| EDSS: 0.9 (range 0–3.5) | |||||||||
| Porcaro et al. ( | Oz (EEG 10–20 system) 7 × 10 cm | 15 min/day, 5 days 1.5 mA | Yes | MFIS | Crossover, sham controlled (washout individually calculated by MFIS compared to baseline | 18 RR | MS patients with EDSS <3.5 and mFIS score > 30 | None reported | |
| Tecchio et al. ( | Bilateral sensorimotor hand area 70 m2 | Under the chin 84 cm2 | 15 min/day, 5 days 1.5 mA | No | MFIS | Crossover, sham-controlled (washout individually calculated by MFIS compared to baseline) | 8 RR | MS patients with physical items mFIS score > 15 | None reported |
| Hanken et al. ( | Right parietal cortex (P4) 5 × 7 cm | Right forehead 6 × 15 cm | Single session 20 min | Yes (RT) | - RT during a vigilance task | Randomized, sham-controlled | 46 (18 RR, 28 SP) analyzed 20 for each arm, divided in subgroups according to cognitive fatigue assessed by FSMC | MS patients ( | None reported |
| Mori et al. ( | M1 leg area contralateral to the affected limb | iTBS + individualized ET (2 h/day for 2 weeks) | 1 session/day for 10 sessions over 2 weeks | Yes (real iTBS + exercise therapy group) | FSS Seconday outcome | Randomized, sham-controlled | 20 RR | Definite RR MS ( | Treatment was generally well-tolerated. |
| 10 bursts of 3 stimuli at 50 Hz, repeated at 5 Hz every 10 s, for a total of 600 stimuli; biphasic waveform 80% AMT | iTBS + ET ( | ||||||||
| Gaede et al. ( | a) left PFC (sham-controlled) b) bilateral M1 | Deep TMS a) H6-coil b) H10-coil (bihemispherical stimulation) | 18 sessions (3/week) over 6 weeks a) 50 bursts of 36 stimuli, 18 Hz, 120% RMT, ITI 20 s,18 min b) 40 bursts of 20 stimuli, 5 Hz, ITI 20 s, 90% RMT, 16 min | Yes (more pronounced for bilateral M1) | FSS | Randomized, sham-controlled | 9 PCF real, 10 PFC sham, 9 M1 | MS diagnosis ( | None serious: headache (30%), paresthesia or pain, gait disturbance, dizziness, tiredness, legs/bladder spasticity, discomfort |
| Korzhova et al. ( | Bilateral M1 | a) 20 Hz rTMS f8 coil b) iTBS + physical therapy (45–55 min/session) | 1/day for 5 consecutive days, for 2 weeks a) 2 s on, 28 s off, 1,600 stimuli, 80% RMT, 30 min b) 10 bursts of 3 stimuli at 35 Hz, ITI 5 Hz, 1,200 stimuli/session, 80% RMT, 10 min | Yes (20 Hz rTMS group only) | MFIS Secondary outcome | Randomized, sham-controlled | 34 SP (12 in the 20 Hz-rTMS group, 12 in the iTBS group, 10 in the sham group) | SP MS diagnosis according to McDonald criteria 2010 and lower spastic paraparesis with MAS > 2 measured in the knee | None reported |
| Palm et al. ( | F3 (EEG 10–20 system) 25 cm2 | AF8 (EEG 10–20 system) 25 cm2 | 20 min/day for 3 days Peak to peak amplitude of 2 mA, full-band white noise from 0 to 500 Hz, variance 650/2 μA | No | MFIS | Crossover, sham-controlled (3-weeks wash-out) | 16 (11 RR, 4 SP, 1 PP) | Clinically definite MS ( | Phosphenes, insomnia, nausea, severe headache (1, after sham) |
DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; EEG, electroencephalography; FSS, Fatigue Severity Scale; iTBS, intermittent theta burst stimulation; ITI, inter-train interval; MFIS, Modified Fatigue Impact Scale; MSFSS, MS-specific FSS; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PFC, prefrontal cortex; PP, primary progressive; PPC, posterior parietal cortex; PROMIS, Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System; RMT, resting motor threshold; RR, relapsing–remitting; RT,reaction time; SP, secondary progressive; rTMS, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; tDCS, transcranial direct current stimulation; tRNS, transcranial random noise stimulation; VAS, visual analog scale for fatigue.